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TUFTS   UNIVERSITY   LIBRARIES 


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Family  Library  of  Veterinary  Medicine 


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BOSTON 
WORK  HORSE  PARADE 
!      ASSOCIATION 


1904 


CAT;\iLoGUE 


f 


# 


Boston  Work!  Hdfse?  Parade 
Ajciation 


SECOND   ANNl 


NJ 


\f  A  P) » 


y 


ay   30th,    1904 


PRESS   (JF  •  C  ■  Jl  •.  15UCK.  •  .^-  •  CO 

iVo.TON 


or 


DIRECTORS 

R.  A.  LAAV^EENCE,  Piiesidext,   Dt-vonshire  Buiklino- 

K.  K.   CLARKE,  Vice-Pkesiuent,   72  Lincoln  Street 

1 
C.  S.  KACKEMANN,  Vice-President,   28  Court  Street 

H.   C.   MERVVIN,   Secretai!Y,   State  House,  Room  35(1 

I 
AUSTIN   PETERS,  M.R.C.V.S.,  TrkASUiiER,  State  House,  Room  1H<S 

JOSHUA  ATAVOOI),  Hd,  City  Hall 

.)01L\    W  .    B.iKlUL,   M.  j>.,   4^  Ciil'«inui  .-trcel 

J.  H.  JEWETT,   Boston  Herald 

ARTPHTR  PERRIN,  Fisher  Avenue, ,Brookline 

I 
W.   1).   (^UIMB^ %   ('.  :Merrimac  Stredt 

I  t 

J.  H.  SMUIH,  0  71   Atlantic  Avenu(| 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


X  \\)\i\,  i;)02,  an  article  appeared  in  xho  Boston  Transcript  Avhieh 
C^  1  ir-  >j/  advocated  the  holdiniz:  in  Boston  of  a  woi'k  horse  })arade.  This  su<>- 
^^{y  ?^'  ."♦^'•'^tion  caught  the  eye  of  ^fr.  11.  A.  Lawrence,  who  had  long 
<^  ^S)  '^^^'•^i''^'*-^  to  see  such  a  parade  established  in  Boston,  and  who  was 
hd^^^rr-^^^'    ianiiliar  \yith  the  working   of   the    London    and   Liverjxx)!   cart   horse 


l^arade  societies.  INfr.  Lawrence  called  upon  the  writer  of  the  Transcrijjt  article, 
and  it  was  agreed  between  them  that  an  attempt  should  be  made  in  this  direction. 
Accordingl}'  it  was  announced  in  the  newspapers  that  a  meetin<>-  of  all  those 
interested  in  getting  up  a  work  horse  parade  in  Boston,  would  be  held  at  the  Parker 
House,  on  May  1),  1902,  and  a  large  room  capable  of  holding  about  one  hundred  per- 
sons was  engaged.  The  attendance,  however,  was  somewhat  less  than  had  been 
expected,  being  estimated  at  from  four  to  six  persons.  The  meeting  was  adjourned 
to  ^lay  28tli,  and  in  the  meantime  numerous  printed  circulars  were  sent  out,  statino- 
the  object  of  the  adjourned  meeting.  Upon  this  second  occasion  some  eight  or  ten  ^■-''^" 
persons,  by  actual  count,  were  present,  two  or  three  of  whom,  however,  mysteriously 
disappeared  soon  afterward,  and,  so  far  as  the  Association  is  informed,  have  never 
been  seen  since. 

However,  a  lieginning  had  been  made,  and  sliortl}"  afterward  an  association  Avas  - 
formed,    with    the  following  officers  : — President    R.    A.    Lawrence  ;  Secretary,   PL 

C.  ]\Iersvin  ;  Treasurer,  Dr.  Austin  Peters  ;  Directors,  Joshua  AtAvood,  od,  R.  K. 
Clarke,  H.  K.  Lyman,  Arthur  Perrin,  C.  S.  Rackemann.  ]\lr.  John  H.  Jewett  of  the 
Herald,  and  Mr.  Frank  G.  Trott  of  the  Globe,  Avere  elected  honorary  members.  The 
intention  AA'as  to  hold  the  parade  on  Labir  Day,  1902,  and  as  Mr.  ^lerAvin  Avas  obliged 
to  leave  the  city,  Mr.  R.  Iv.  Clarke  took  his  place  as  Secretary.  It  Avas  found,  Iioav- 
cver,  that  the  time  Avas  too  short,  and,  moreover,  the  selection  of  Labor  Day  was  i.^*^ 
disapproved  by  many  teamsters.  Accordingly  the  parade  Avas  postponed  to  ^Memorial 
Day,  jNIay  80,  1903.  Early  in  the  spring,  })repa)ations  Avere  begun,  Mr.  Clarke 
becoming  Vice-President,  Mr.  INIerwin  resuming  his  place  as  Secretary,  and  Mr.  W. 

D.  Quimby,  a  master  truckman,  being  added  to  the  list  of  directors.  It  Avas  jSfr. 
Quiml)}'  Avlio  suggested  the  scheme  of  drivers'  certificates,  perhaps  the  most  valuable 
feature  of  the  parade,  and  certainly  an  improvement  upon  the  English  system.  The 
conditions  upon  AA'hich  these  certificates  are  aAvarded  Avill  be  found  stated  beloAv. 


The  prospect  \v:is  disfourairina-,  (■()iitril)ii(i<)iis  at  lirst  cimic  in  slowly,  and  some 
HOOO  printed  circulars  which  had  hccn  sent  tlnouiih  the  mail  appeared  to  have  gone 
into  the  waste  basket  unread.  The  Directors,  however,  were  ojjtiniistic,  and  wdien 
the  President  of  the  Association  deposited  a  thousand-dollar  bond  with  the  Treasurer 
as  a  2"uaranty  fund,  they  felt  sure  of  ultimate  success,  (iradually,  too,  the  owners 
of  work-horses  awoke  to  the  situation,  and  when  the  entries  (dosed,  thev  weic  found 
to  numlx'r  four  hundred  and  tift\-f()ur. 

The  Association  obtained  in  contributions  the  sum  of  $l,7i>(;.00,  and  as  the  run- 
ninir  expenses  were  very  slight,  almost  the  Avhole  of  this  sum  was  devoted  to  the 
parade.  Over  five  hundred  dollars  were  distributed  in  cash  ])rizes,  as  follows: 
Fifty  first  prizes  of  four  dollars  each  ;  fifty  second  prizes  of  three  dollars  each  ;  fifty 
third  prizes  of  two  dollars  each  ;  fift}'  fouith  prizes  of  one  dollar  each.  Some  special 
prizes  were  also  awarded  by  the  Association,  one  in  particular  to  Old  King  Ooal,  a 
famous  black  horse  of  great  size  and  beauty,  belonging  to  the  Metropolitan  Coal 
Oomi)any.  King  Coal,  probably  the  best  known  hoi'sc  in  Boston,  is  the  proud  pos- 
sessor of  eighteen  blue  riI)bons  won  b}'  him  at  various  horse  show^s.  He  headed  the 
procession,  led  b}'  the  negro  teamster  who  for  many  years  drove  him  and  his  mate. 
— ~^  In  addition  to  the  mone}^  })rizcs,  libbo^ns,  costing  fifty  cents  apiece,  were  given 

with  each  i)rize,  and  also  a  di})l()ma  foi-  the  owner.      These  diplomas,  as  web  .t..  . 
certificates    for    the    drivers  entitled  to  them,   were    handsomely   engraved    on    good 
l)a})er,  and  many  of  them  have  l)cen  framed  by  the  recipients. 

Four  special  prizes  for  the  Truckmen's  Class  were  also  awarded  through  the 
generosity  of  the  following  donors:  C.  II.  I)uck  cVc  Co.,  The  Moffett  ^'ehicle  Bearing- 
Co.,  The  Buidvcr  Hill  Carriage  Co.,  Mr.  P.  McC^ill,  Charlcstown. 

!^-"  It  is  no  exagiicration  to  say  that  the  })arade  was  a  trium})hant  success,  'i'he  pro- 
cession was  about  four  miles  long,  and  the  greatest  enthusiasm  was  shown,  both  b}' 
exhibitors  and  spectators.  The  drivers  cared  little  or  nothing  for  the  money  wdiich 
they  received  ;  Avhat  they  wen;  thinking  of  was  the  |)ossible  honor  to  be  bestowed 
u})on  their  horses,  and  indirectly,  ujion  themsidves  ;  and  many  of  them,  when  they 
ap})roa(died  the  reviewing  stand  where  the  piizcs  were  awarded,  \vere  observed  to  be 
])ale  with  apprehension.  Roughly  speaking,  every  other  \\\'\\\  received  a  prize,  and 
yet,  as  the  officers  of  the  Association  found  to  their  sorrow,  many  of  the  drivers 
were  grievously  disapjjointed  at  the  failure  of  their  horses  to  obtain  a  ribbon.  It  is 
the  intention  at  the  second  parade  to  increase  the  num])er  of  prizes. 

In  some  cases  interested  persons  thought  that  injustice  had  been  don(>,  ])ut  in 
most,  if  not  all  of  these  cases,  subse(|uent  in(|uiry  proved  that  the  horse  in  (|uestion 
\\:\   '^'en   dis(|ualified  for  some  good   I'eason,  as  that  he   was  slightly   lame,  that  his 


harness  was  ill-filtiiig,  or  for  some  other  like  cause.  Exhibitors  and  the  |)u])lie  gen- 
erally are  reiiiinded  that  the  prizes  of  this  Association  arc  awarded  upon  rules  dif- 
ferent from  those  of  the  ordinary  horse  show.  The  instructions  to  the  judircs  on 
this  point  read  as  follows:  "The  prizes  are  to  lie  awarded,  pruiKirlh/,  for  li'ood, 
hard,  working  condition,  docile  and  gentle  manners,  showing  that  the  horses  have 
.  ■!  ,;indly  treated,  and  for  comfortable  harnessing.  If  two  or  more  single  horses 
1)1  .'tims  of  horses  arc  on  a  [)ar  in  this  i-espect,  fJien  the  judges  shall  award  the  prize 
i  t'lo  best  horse  or  the  best  team."  Under  this  rule,  to  state  but  one  example,  a 
i-y  beautiful  pair  of  horses  were  lightly  excluded  from  receiving  a  prize  at  the 
I'.irade  because  their  collars  were  too  ^mall.  If  this  principle  upon  which  the  i)rizes 
ire  awarded  is  ke})t  in  mind,  the  Association  believes  that  there  will  be  ver}'  little 
dissatisfaction  ^vith  the  awards  of  th(>  judges. 

The  Chief  Marshal  of  the  parade  was  j\Ir.  K.  K.  ("larke,  and  the  Assistant 
^Marshal,  ]\Ir.  Joshua  Atwood,  3d.  Dr.  Peters,  the  head  of  the  State  Cattle  Bureau, 
took  charge  of  the  Judges.  These  three  gentlemen  were  well  mounted,  and  presented 
that  semi-inilitarj^  semi-sporting  appearance  which  was  proper  to  the  occasion.  The 
diplomas  and  certificates,  the  artistic  excellence  of  which  has  been  remarked  by  man}', 
were  designed  by  Mr.  Arthur  Perrin. 

S6on  after  the  first  i)arade,  the  Association  was  incorporated  under  the  laws  of 
Massachusetts,  this  being  done  under  the  direction  and  at  the  expense  of  C.  S.  Racke- 
mann,  Esq.,  upon  whose  legal  and  practical  judgiuent  the  Association  greatly  relies. 
Mr.  Jewett  of  the  Boston  Herald,  and  Mr.  Smith,  a  leading  meml^er  of  the  Master 
Teamsters'  Association,  who  now  became  directors,  had  contril)uted  very  nuich  to  the 
success  of  the  first  parade  hy  their  intelligent  and  energetic  assistance.  The  other  new 
director,  Dr.  John  W.  Bartol,  is  a  practicing  physician,  and  a  member  of  the  State 
Board  of  Health. 

^  It  was  the  object  of  the   parade   to    induce   owners  and  drivers  of  work  horses  to 

take  more  pride  in  their  appearance  and  more  interest  in  their  welfare  ;  and  this  ob- 
ject has  been  accoiuplished  in  great  measure.  The  good  effects  of  the  parade  have 
been  lasting,  for  it  is  the  testimony  of  veterinary  surgeons,  owners,  drivers,  horse- 
slioers,  harness  makers  and  various  other  persons  in  different  parts  of  the  city,  that 
work  horses,  as  a  rule  are  better  groomed  and  treated,  and  that  harness  is  more  neatly 
kept  than  was  the  case  before  the  i)arade. 

That  similar  parades  will  ultimately  be  held  in  every  large  cit}^  in  the  country  is 
the  hope  and  expectation  of  the  Boston  Association.  One  such  has  already  been  held 
in  Kansas  City,  Missouri,  and  others  are  projected  for  Baltimore,  Washington,  Buf- 
falo, and  Toronto,  Canada. 


THE  FUTURE  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

As  to  the  fiitiivc,  although  the  uniin  object  of  the  Association  is  to  organize  an 
annual  parade  and  competition,  it  will  consider  itself  at  liberty  to  use  its  funds  for 
the  relief  of  work  horses  in  any  proper  and  practicable  manner.  Especially  does  it 
hoi)e  to  i)r()cure  better  watering  facilities  in  the  streets,  and  more  humane  pavements  ; 
to  prevent  the  use  of  horses  that  are  lame  or  otherwise  unfit  for  lal)or ;  to  piovide  or 
to  assist  others  in  providing  a  country  home  or  place  of  rest,  for  horses  temporarily 
disabled  or  exhausted. 

Beside  what  sums  are  obtained  from  the  publication  of  advertisements  in  the 
catalogue,  the  Association  has  no  receipts  except  gifts.  'I'he  officers  render  their 
services,  which  in  some  cases  are  arduous,  without  any  compensation  ;  and  it  is  con- 
fidently expected  that  those  citizens  of  Boston  who  love  horses,  and  who  derive 
pleasure  or  [)rofit  from  the  use  of  them,  will  contribute  according  to  their  means. 


SECOND  ANNUAL  PARADE,  MAY  30,  1904 


PRIZES. 

HE  number  of  prizes  assigned  to  each  class  is  stated  in  tlic  catalogue 
at  the  head  of  each  class,  but  this  number  may  be  decreased  as  cir- 
cumstances may  require,  and  as  the  Judges  determine.  The 
})rizes  will  be  awarded  in  sets  of  four  prizes,  namely,  first,  second, 
third  and  fourth. 

A  ribbon  goes  with  each  prize  as  follows  : — Blue  with  the  first, 
Red  with  the  second  ;  Yellow  with  the  third  ;  White  with  the  fourth.  The  money 
prizes  will  be  given  to  the  dri\ers.  Diplomas  for  the  owners  will  be  awarded 
with    each    prize. 

In  addition,  certificates  Avill  be  awarded  to  those  drivers  who  are  entitled  to  them 
as  stated  Ijelow.  The  money  prizes  and  ribbons  will  be  given  at  the  reviewing  stand. 
The  di})lomas  and  certificates  will  be  delivered  by  mail  or  otherwise  after  the  parade. 

CERTIFICATES, 

Certificates  will  be  awarded  to  those  drivers  who  are  designated  in  the  catalogue, 
"Qualified  for  certificate,"  provided  that  in  the  opinion  of  the  Judges,  the  horse  or 
horses  driven  by  them  in  the  parade  are  serviceably  sound,  and  in  good  flesh,  con- 
dition and  spirits,  showing  that  the}^  have  been  well  and  gently  handled.  "Qualified 
for  certificate"  means  certified  by  the  owner  to  have  driven  the  horse  or  team  of  horses 
shown  in  the  parade  for  at  least  one  year  prior  to  the  date  of  the  entry.  A  horse 
shall  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  he  goes  sound  and  breathes  sound.  A  blind 
horse  may  be  serviceably  sound. 


INSTRUCTIONS  TO  JUDGES. 

The  Judges  are  earnestly  re(|uestcd  to  be  at  their  stations  promptly  at  eight 
o'clock,  so  that  the  judging  can  begin  as  soon  as  the  horses  arrive.  This  is  essential 
to  the  complete  success  of  the  parade. 

It  is  the  duty  of  the  Judges  to  exclude  from  the  parade  any  horse  that  is  do'-k- 
tailed,  or  sick,  lame,  thin,  or  otherwise  unfit  for  work;  and  also,  unless  the  defect  is 


ri'iiicdicd  on  tlic  spot,  any  lioisc  iini)roj)cily  Ii;inicssc(l,  or  attiiclicd  to  a  vehicle 
bt'ui'ini;'  any   temporary  adNcrtisenient  or  deeoiation. 

The  prizes  are  to  be  awarded  })riiiiaril3'  for  good,  hard,  working  eoiKlition,  docile 
and  gentle  manners,  showing  that  the  horses  have  ])eeii  kindly  treated,  and  for  com- 
fortable harnessing.  If  two  or  moi'e  single  horses  or  teams  of  horses  are  on  a  })ar  in 
tiiis  iesi)ect,  then  the  Judges  shall  award  the  prize  to  the  l)est  horse  or  best  team. 

Age  is  not  to  be  considered  at  all,  except  that  preference  is  to  be  given,  other 
things  being  e(|nal,  to  the  older  horse. 

Color  is  not  to  be  considered,  even  in  respect  to  matched  teams. 

The  vehicle  is  not  to  be  considered. 

Harnesses  that  are  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  recjuired  of  them, 
are  to  be  })referred  to  heavier  harnesses.  This  rule  is  to  be  observed  especiall}'  in 
respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts,  in  which  great  strength  is  not  needed. 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  hanu'ss  is  not  to  be  considered. 

If  the  Judges  find  it  necessary,  horses  shall  be  driven  at  a  walk  or  trot,  for  their 
insi)ection,  as  the  Judges  direct. 

If  any  disputed  point  arises,  the  Judges  for  the  class  shall  decide  it,  and  their 
decision  shall  be  final,  except  that  if  the  Judges  so  desire  they  may  require  the 
assistance  of  any  two  members  of  the  Executive  Committee,  who,  with  the  Judges, 
shall  make  the  final  decision. 

The  Judges  w^ill  indicate  on  the  Catalogue  the  numbers  of  the  horses  winning 
prizes,  and  the  names  of  the  drivers  winning  certificates,  and  will  bring  the  cata- 
logiu's,  so  marked,  to  the  revie wing-stand  as  soon  as  the  judging  is  finished.  They 
are  recpicsted  not  to  inform  anybody  of  the  result  of  the  judging,  except  the  person 
appointed  to  receive  their  report  at  the  revie  wing-stand. 


SPECIAL  PRIZES. 

OLD  HORSE  CLASS. 

In  this  class  the  following  prizes  are  offered  :  1st  Prize,  Gold  or  Silver  Medal, 
of  the  value  of  $20,  by  the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to 
Animals,  through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq.  ;  2d  Prize,  Ten  Dollars,  by  the  Animal  Rescue 
League;  Hd  Prize,  Eive  Dollars,  l)y  Mr.  W.  D.  (^uimby  :  4th  Prize,  Four  Dollars, 
by  the  Rev.  Reuben  Kidner.  In  addition,  fourteen  "highly  conunended "  certifi- 
cates and  prizes  of  One  Dollar  eai-h,  arc  offered  by  the  Association. 

These  special  prizes  go  to  the  owner ;  but  the  Association  will  also  award  with 
each  special  prize  a  rosette,  to  be  the  property  of  the  driver. 


IIoi-scs  to  1)0  eligible  to  thi.s  class  must  ba  in  active  service,  and  must  have  been 
owned  and  used  by  the  person  makiiii;-  the  entry  (or  by  his  predecessor  in  the  busi- 
ness), for  not  less  than  ten  years  prior  to  the  entry. 

The  prizes  in  this  class  will  be  awarded  to  the  horses  in  best  condition,  age  and 
length  of  service  considered.  Horses  entered  in  this  class  are  not  eligible  for  any 
other  class.     This  class  is  not  open  to  horses  owned  by  cities  or  towns. 

VETERAN  DRIVER  PRIZE 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers,  through  (i.  T.  Angell,  Esq., 
a  Silver  Medal  of  the  value  of  ten  dollars,  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  has  been 
the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer,  or  of  the  pre- 
decessor in  business  of  that  employer.  In  addition,  the  Association  will  give  a 
bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in  this  class,  (the  prize  winner  excepted),  whose 
term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 

TRUCKMEN'S  CLASS 

The  following  Special  Prizes  are  offered  b}^  the  persons  named  below  for  the  best 
ten  entries  exhibited  b}^  any  Truckman  or  Trucking  firm  : — 

1st  Prize.  —  The  painting  and  varnishing  of  a  wagon  by  Welch, 

Dwyer  &  Grady,  Mystic  xivenue,  Somerville. 
2d  Prize. —  A  pair  of  Irish  Collars,   offered  by  Mr.  P.  McCall, 

Rutherford  Avenue,   Charlestown. 
od  Prize. —  The  Shoeing  of  Eive  Horses  by  Dr.   A.   F.  White, 
11()  Washington  Street,  North. 


For  the  list  of  judges  and  other  matter,   see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  Catalogue. 


Metropolitan  Coal   Company 

GENERAL  OFFICES: 

30  CONGRESS  STREET,  Boston 


ANTHRACITE 


COAL  B 


FOR  ALL  STEAM  AND 
DOMESTIC  PURPOSES 


ITUMINOUS 


Branch  Offices  in  all  sections  of  the  city  and  suburbs. 

Bay  State  Fuel  Company 

A    Consolidation   of  the   old    Firm  of 

RICHARDSON   &  BACON  with  BAKER-HUNNEWELL  CO. 
General   Office  and   Wharv^es 

157    Main    Street  -  -  -  -  Cambridge 

BRANCH  OFFICES  ' 

In  Cambridge 


1336  Massachusetts  Ave. 
Harvard  Sq. 

624  Massachusetts  Ave. 
Central  Street 


BRANCH  OFFICE 
In  Boston 

127  Cambridge  Street 


Coal    and    Wood 


HEADING  THE  PROCESSION 


KING  COAL,  20  years  old,  owned   by  Mctro})olitiin   Coal  Coinpany,  winner  of   IS 
blue  ribbons  at  Horse  Shows.      Led  by  John  Boyle. 

]VL\.I()R  (Xo.  iMO),  2.'>  years  old,  a  veteran    of    K!  years  service  in   the  Boston  Fire 
I)ej)artnient.      Led  by  a  member  of  Fire  Fngine  Company  No.  <S. 


CLASS  K-OLD  HORSES 

The  Prizes  are  as  follows  :— ist,  Gold  Medal ;  2nd,  Silver  Medal  ;    3rd, 
I1..00.     In  additiou,  other  horses  in  this  class,  to  a  number  not  exceeding 


$5.00  Gold   Piece ;    4th, 
fourteen,  maj-  be  highly 


comnie 

nded, 

and  in  that  case  their  owners  shal 

1  receive  a  prize  of  fi.oo  and  a 

r 

ibbon . 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Length 

of 
Service 

I 

N.  M.  Appley 

Chester  K.  Appley 

Billy 

25 

17 

2 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

Wni.  Borns 

Ned 

23 

17 

3 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Deer 

24 

16 

4 

" 

Spot 

22 

16 

5 

,. 

Frank  Sturtevant 

Ben 
Sargent 

20 

'5 

6 

" 

Jack 

20 

15 

7 

" 

Wni.  J.  Harkness 

Chubb 

22 

16 

8 

W.  C.  Bray 

Jas.  E.  Pinkhani 

Peggy 

18 

12 

9 

Paul  G.  Cobleuger 

Tom  Doherty 

Bessie 

21 

II 

10 

FilieM,  Richardson  &  Co. 

Frank  Reavey 

Tom 

23 

18 

II 

.<          .. 

L.  H.  Kcefe 

Sam 

22 

17 

12 

.<          <, 

Michael  Murray 

John 

25 

20 

f3 

H.  P.  Hool  &  Sons 

B.  A.  Chute 

Old  Nell 

18 

12 

14 

G.  B.  Howard  &  Co. 

G.  N.  Bryant 

(    Frank 

14 

10 

15 

.. 

" 

)     Fred 

15 

10 

16 

.. 

John  Gardella 

Tommy 

22 

15 

17 

Asa  M.  Husscy 

Wni.  Strout 

Joe 

20 

15 

18 

" 

Dan 

15 

12 

19 

.. 

Nigger 

17 

13 

20 

.. 

,     Doc 

18 

12 

21 

Jordan,  Marsh  &  Co. 

Louis  Briar 

Romeo 

23 

15 

22 

Win.  McCluug 

Chas.  McCartney 

Fanny 

18 

14 

23 

McKeuuey  &  Waterbury 

John  Bushee 

Jim 

16 

12 

ATWOOD  ca  McMANUvS 

MANUFACTURERS     OF     A  L  I.     KINDS     OF 

Wooden  Boxes,  Packing 
Cases  and  Kindling  Wood 

Factory  and  Office,  Carter  Street  and  FourtH  »Street 

Chelsea,  Mass.  telephone  connection 


W.  H.  YOULDEN  J.  H.  SMITH  T.  J.  HOPKINS 

YOULDEN,  SMITH  &  HOPKINS 

MOVERS      OF  — - 

iSafes  and  Machinery 

TEAMING  OF  ALL  KINDS  RIGGING  WORK  A  SPECIALTY 

Main  Office,  r  No.  Paca  St.  RAT  TIMHl^F    Mfi 

Branch  Office,  Griffin's  Stable,  315  Calvert  St.  ^^^^^^^^^^^  ^  ^^' 

TELEPHONE   CONNECTION 

YOULDEN,  SMITH  &  HOPKINS 
.  .  Uriickmen  .  , 


OFFICE  STAND 

571   Atlantic  Avenue  48  Sudbury  Street 


Basement 


Telephones 

135    MAIN  I  740    MAIN 

1150      HAYMARKET 


CLASS  I.— OLD  nORS-ES—Coriiinued 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age, 

Length 
Service 

24 

N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

Bartlty  Rowe 

(   Jennie 

^7 

12 

25 

.. 

1    Dollie 

17 

II 

26 

Odorless  Excavating  Co. 

John  Burke 

Dolly 

16 

11 

27 

Perkins  Wood- Working  Co. 

Martin  T.  Magoou 

Kate 

18 

10 

28 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

E.  W.  Freeman 

Billy 

22 

16 

29 

J.  T.  Tighc  Co. 

Jos.  vShea 

Charlie 

20 

14 

3'> 

« 

Pat'k  Ark  man 

Polly 

21 

16 

31 

I).  F.  Warren 

Dougall  McMillan 

Paddy 

20 

12 

32 

Jas.  Weir 

Jas.  Weir 

Ned 

30 

19 

CLASS  2.—  CITIES— Park  Department 

Prizes  not  exceeding  eight  in  number   may   be  awarded  in  this  Class 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 
City  of  Boston 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


John  Coughlin 

Jas.  J.  Melyn 

Jeremiah  Cronin 

John  Morrissey 

Thos.  H.  Mulvey 

John  O'Brien 
Patrick  Sheehan 

James  O'Neil 

John  F.  Coakley 

Pat.  Dailey 

John  Ouigley 

W.J.  Donely 


No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

I 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

5  AT  I  S  FAC  T  I  O  N  ^o"1-^i.^^^ 

YOU     RliCEIVH     THE     BEST     GRADE     OF     LAUNDERING     AT 

STANDARD    PRICES    •    OUR    DELIVERY    SERVICE    IS    PROMPT 

T  E  Iv  P:;  P  H  O  N  E     t)R     W  R  I  '1'  ]■:     T  o 


TKI.EPHONK,    2IO-3    DOK. 

Massachusetts  ='' 

Stables 

35  Endicott  Street 

Boston,  Mass. 

TelepK 

S.  A.  TUTTLE.  Prop. 
Dr.  H.  A.  TUTTLE.  Mgr. 

one,    RicHmond    572 

Proctor  Bros 

na/mol-ESAI-e:      aivjd      rei-t/vil. 

H  AV,  GRAIN 
ST  R ANA/,  EITC 


Crsigiss     Bridgs 


Bast    Cambridge 


G.     O,      F'ROCXOF',      F>roprietor 


CLASS  3.— CITIES  AND  TOWNS— Street  Department, 


Prizes  uot  Lxctediug  twelve  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


'rize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

45 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

City  of  Brstou 

Jas.  J.  Connors 

Yes 

46 

City  of  Boston 

Jeremiah  Collins 

Yes 

47 

City  of  Boston 

John  Lynch 

Yes 

48 

City  of  Boston 

Martin  Foley 

Yes 

49 

City  of  Boston 

Patrick  Hartigan 

Yes 

50 

Town  of  Brookline 

Wm.  Jennings 

Yes 

51 

Town  of  Brookline 

Henry  A.  Lacey 

Yes 

52 

Town  of  Brookline 

Thos.  E.  Sullivan 

Yes 

53 

Town  of  Brookline 

Jos.  McKinney 

Yes 

54 

Town  of  Brookline 

Frank  Crohan 

Yes 

55 

Town  of  Brookline 

Jas.  P.  Lacey 

Yes 

56 

City  of  Newton 

Michael  Pendergast 

No 

57 

City  of  Newton 

Michael  Thornton 

No 

58 

City  of  Newton 

Patrick  Kone 

No 

59 

City  of  Newton 

Timothy  Shiuneck 

No 

60 

City  of  Newton 

Jas.  Keating 

No 

61 

City  of  Newton 

John  Dungan 

No 

62 

City  of  Newton 

Patrick  Halleran 

No 

63 

City  of  Newton 

Thos.  Matthews 

No 

64 

City  of  Newton 

John  Carroll 

No 

65. 

City  of  Newton 

Michael  McDermott 

No 

CLASS  4.—  HUCKSTER. 

One  prize  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


66 


James  Meredith 


James  Meredith 


CLASS  5.— BARREL  RACK. 

One  Prize  may  be  awarded  in  this  Clas.s. 


67 


Dennis  John  Dorgan 


Dennis  John  Dorgan 


THE  DRISK  QUESTION  Is  readily  solved 
to  the  satisfaction  and  health  of  all  ty 

weiiiiai[G[&(io:s 

3  Breakfast 


Pleasing  to  the  taste, 
Wourisliing:  to  the  system, 
Quieting  to  the  nerves, 
An  ideal  food-drink  —  good 
morning,  noon,  and  night. 

Be  sure  that  you  get  the  genuine  article  made  1  y 

Walter  Baker  &  Co.'^"^ 

Estabushed  1780.       Dorchestcr,  Mass. 

41      HIGHEST    AWARDS     IN 
1      EUROPE  AND  AMERICA 


UDWARD  C.   BRACKKTT,   M.  D.  V. 


VVood  Working  of  Every  Description 

Perkins 
yjm  Oforkitid  Co. 

Wareham  a^nd  Maiden  Sts. 
BOSTON 


i  It  ]  Treaioiit 

(  15  ) 


MILLWORK 

PI.ANING  (Extra  Width), 
VARIETY  MOULDING, 
BAND   AND   JIG    SAWING, 
TURNING,    SAND     PAPERING, 
ETC. 

BUILDERS'  FINISH 

VENEERED    DOORS 
AND    PANEE    WORK, 
MOULDINGS,    POSTS,    RAILS, 
BALUSTERS,    BRACKETS, 
FLOORS,    ETC. 


DANIEL  D.   LEE,  M.  D.  V 


Boston  Veterinary  Hospital 

548  Albany  Street^  Corner  Dedham 

Horses  Boarded  and  Treated,  $1.50  per  day. 

Dogs  and  the  smaller  animals,  50c.   per  day. 
Consultation,  ;^i.oo  to  $3.00. 
Two  Ambulances  On  Call  at  All  Times.  Examination  of  Horses  For  Soundness. 

SHOEiiNiG    forge: 

Calls  Made  Day  and  Night.  Telephone,  "Tremont  992." 


CLASS  6,  —  LAUNDRIES. 


Pri/.es  not  exceeding  eight  in  number  may  l)e  awarded  in  this  Class. 


Prize 

No. 

of 
Entry 

68 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  ot 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

Blue  Rihl)on   Laundry 

Tom  Clancy 

No 

69 

City  Laundry 

Frank  1',.  Murray 

Yes 

70 

City  Laundry 

Frank  H.  Ames 

Yes 

71 

City  Laundry 

Solon  J.  Richardso;i 

Yes 

72 

City  Laundry 

Walter  P.  Gardner 

Yes 

73 

City  Laundry 

Wni.  W.  Paterson 

No 

74 

City  Laundry 

Norman  W.  Sias 

No 

75 

City  Laundry 

Geo.  R.  Bancroft 

No 

76 

City  Laundry 

Frank  Walker 

No 

77 

D.iu'1  Keleher 

Dan']  J.  Riley 

Yes 

78 

G.  W.  PetteugiU 

G.  W.  PetteiigiU 

79 

Taylor  Bros. 

Chas.  F*.  Haynes 

Yes 

80 

Taylor  Bros. 

Loran  K.  Mitchell 

Yes 

81 

Taylor  Bros. 

Benj.  L.  Gardner 

Yes 

82 

White  .Star    Co. 

A.  J.  Poirier 

Yes 

CLASS  7.— DELIVERY  WAGONS. 

Prizes  not  exceeding  twenty  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


83 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

John  B.  Fay 

I 

No 

85 

Lillian  M.  P:aton 

Timothy  Cronon 

I 

No 

86 

Dr.  A.  C.  Daniels  Co. 

Charles  H.  Ball 

2 

Yes 

88 

C.  F.  Hovcy  &  Co. 

Wm.  E.  Denvir 

I 

Yes 

89 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

Wm.  H.  Ilogan 

I 

Yes 

90 

C.  F.  Hovcy  &  Co. 

Geo.  K.  Lienhard 

' 

Yes 

91 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

John  A.  Coyne 

I 

No 

92 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

Jas.  Hagcrty 

I 

No 

93 

Jordan,  INIarsh  Co. 

Timothy  Connolly 

I 

No 

94 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

Jas.  Bates 

I 

No 

Chocolate    Bon-Bons 

"Name  on   Every  Piece'' 

RETAIL    STORE 

410  "WASHINGTON   ST. 


CUSHION 


RUBBER 
HORSE-SHOE 


PADS 


ESPECIALLY   ADAPTED 
F  OR     WORK      HORSES 


Order     by     Nauie     and      Take     No     Substitute 

COST    NO    MORE 
There   is   No  I.amcncss  with  Air  Cushion  Pads 
Don't     Have     a     I.aine    Horse    in     Your     Barn 

It  is  as  F;sscntial  for  Your  Work   Horses  to  l^e 
Shod  with  Pads  as  it  is  for  Your  Pleasure  Horses 


REVERE  RUBBER  CO. 


Sole 
Manufacturers 


Boston,  Mass, 


CLASS  7.— DELIVERY  WAGO'NS—Conh-nued 


Prize 

No. 

ot 

Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

95 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

John  Murray 

No 

96 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

Albert  Daley 

No 

97 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co, 

John  D.  Lockney 

No 

98 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

Geo.  Hart 

No 

99 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

Daniel  Moylan 

No 

100 

McKenuey  &  Waterbury  Co. 

Wm.  C.  Salmon 

No 

lOI 

C.  H.  Porter 

J.  R.  Emery 

Yes 

]02 

C.  H.  Porter 

Wm.  Burkett 

No 

103 

A.  P.  White 

A.  P.  White 

104 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

M.J.  Buneo 

Yes 

105 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

T.  H.  Barrett 

Yes 

106 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

W.  E.  Emerton 

Yes 

107 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Frank  Pelissier 

Yes 

108 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

J.J.  McCarthy 

No 

109 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thos.  J.  Hill 

Yes 

no 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

John  G.  Mayer 

Yes 

III 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Fred  Andrews 

Yes 

112 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

F.  W.  Anslie 

' 

Yes 

i'3 

R.  IL  White  Co. 

J.  G. Irons 

Yes 

114 

Wilson,  Tisdale&  Co. 

Michael  J.  Shea 

No 

"5 

Wilson,  Tisdale  &  Co. 

Timothy  J.  O'Connor 

No 

116 

Wilson,  Tisdale  &  Co. 

John  Daly 

No 

117 

Wilson,  Tisdale  &  Co. 

Frank  Reardon 

No 

118 

Wilson,  Tisdale  &  Co. 

Jim  Connor 

No 

119 

Wilson,  Tisdale  &  Co. 

Jas.  Sullivan 

No 

CLASS  8.— EXPRESS 


Prizes  not  exceeding  eight  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 

120 

Geo.  H.  CahiU 

Willis  Whines  Thornton 

I 

No 

121 

Day  &  Woodward 

Fred  M.  Day 

I 

122 

W.  B.  Howard 

Frank  McManus 

I 

No 

123 

W.  B.  Howard 

Albert  Preston 

I 

Yes 

JOHN   R  SULLIVAN 

General  Contractor 


LAKE  STREET;  Cot*  Commonwealth  Avenue 


TELEPHONE,  147  BRIGHTON 


It  GUP  Horses  please  you  try  our  laundrii  worh 

Collections  made  in  Roslindale,  DorcHester,  SoutH 
XI^UNDRVVII  ill  Boston,  BrooRline,  BacK  Bay  and  City 

CITY    LAUNDRY 

C.  N.  CUNNINGHAM,  Proprietor 

96,  98,  lOO  Lenox  St. 

Tel.  283  RoxbtAry 


vSUMNER  vS 
MARKET 

31  BROMFIELD  STREET 

E:stablisHed     1844 
telephone:    No.  1240  MAIN 


MILLER  &  KENNETT 

Truckmen  and 
Forwarders 


5   NORTH    MARKET  ST. 
Boston,  Mass. 

TELEPHONE  78  RICHMOND 


CLASS  8.— EXPRESS- G;;///;///r^/ 


No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

124 

J.  E.  Little 

Dennis  Towle 

125 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

126 

Fred  A.  Raymond 

Jas.  F.  Morgan 

127 

Fred  A.  Raymond 

Herbert  S.  Nash 

128 

Carter,  Russell  &  Co. 

Alexander  Dick 

1:9 

Hanson  S.  Thwailes 

J.  A.  Fitzgerald 

130 

Hanson  S.  Thwailes 

W^ni.  Traiuor 

'3' 

D.  F'.  Warren 

Dennis  McNevin 

132 

D.  F.  Warren 

John  Cushiug 

No.  of  I  Driver  quali- 
Horses  fied  for  Certifi- 
in  team  cate 


CLASS  9.— MILK  DEALERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  four  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


133 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Jas.  Pearson 

Yes 

134 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Louis  D.  Stewart 

Yes 

'35 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Arthur  Collings 

No 

136 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Thos.  G.  Hancock 

Yes 

137 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Harry  B.  Day 

I 

Yes 

138 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Chester  Greenlaw 

Yes 

J  39 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

David  A.  Goodwin 

3 

No 

140 

PL  P.  Hood  &  vSoiis 

Irving  N.  Perry 

■  2 

Yes 

141 

Fred  C.  Raymond 

Chas  M.  Raymond 

I 

Yes 

142 

143 

144 

145 

146 

147 
148 


CLASS  10.— EGGS,  PROVISIONS  AND  FISH 

Prizes  not  excee  ling  eight  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


Geo.  Fred   Doorly 
H.  E.  McGoldrick 

Wm.  E.  Pool 
E.  T.  Russell  &  Co. 
Shattuck  &  Jones 
Shattuck  &  Jones 

Wm.  L.  Snow 


Geo.  Fred  Doorly 

Obert  Hanson 

B.  J.  Healey 

Thos.  F.  Creegan 

G.  Fred  Seamon 

John  F.  Bradshaw 

Wm.  L  Snow 


7j/ie  Oqui'rrel  ^ranci  Salted  7/ut  Co. 

....  Manufacturers     and     Wholesale     Dealers     In  ...  . 

XphQ  vSQUIRREL  BRAND 

Salted  Nut   Meats,  Almonds^  Pecans^ 
Pnuts^  Stuffed  Dates  and  Nut  Candies 

PUT  UP  IN  GLASS  JARS  AND  PACKAGES 
TJc/cphono  Connection  622^  624  9/fai'n   Stroct,   Cambr/ci^G 


Telephone,  1237-4  Rich. 


W.  B.  HOWARD'S 

BACK    BAY,    SOUTH 
AND     WEST     END 

EXPRESS 


stand,  14  Dock  Square,  Boston 


Faulkner  &  Gleasoii 

.CTURERS  OF 

HARNESS 


MANUFACTURERS  OF 


FINE  AND 

HEAVY 


Fine  Horse  and  Stable  Furnishings. 
Repairing  Promptly  and  Satisfactorily  Done 

562  Columbia  Road,  Upham's  Corner 


G.    B.    HOWARD  M.    D.    CRESSY 

G.    B.    HO\A/ARD   &   CO. 
Teamsters  and  Forwarders 

Clinton    Market  Boston,    Mass. 


CLASS  lo— EGGS,  PROVISIONS  AND  l<lSU—Co>//i>i/ied 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

148  A 

Thos.   Talbot 

Jauies  Fossa 

Yes 

149 

J.  G.  Walker  &  Sou 

E.  A.  Reddy 

2 

No 

150 

J.  G.  Walker  &  Sou 

Wm.  Brown 

I 

No 

151 

S.  F.  Woodbridge  &  Co. 

Howard  Woodman 

I 

No 

CLASS  U.-  BAKERS  AND  CONFECTIONERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  eight  in  number  maj^  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


152 

Biggi  &  Leverone 

Louis  Biggi 

153 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

Wm.  H.  Vaughn 

Yes 

154 

A.  A.  Knights  &  Son  Corp. 

Wesley  W.  Croft 

Yes 

155 

Walter  M.  I.owney  Co. 

John  J.  Gilligan 

No 

156 

Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

Wm.  J.  Fleming 

No 

157 

Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

John  F.  Mullen,  Jr. 

No 

158 

Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

Robt.  Tibnam 

Yes 

159 

Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

Calvin  Leighteizer 

Yes 

160 

Mrs.  Agnes  Martin 

Patrick  T.  Molan 

Yes 

i6r 

Mrs.  Agnes  Martin 

Chas.  A.  Magwood 

Yes 

162 

W.  H.  McCarthy 

W.  H.  McCarthy 

163 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

Wm.  Lloyd 

Yes 

164 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

Bartley  M.  Roe 

2 

Yes 

CLASS  12,—  GROCERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  sixteen  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


165 

166 

The  Consolidated  Ubero 

Plantation  Co. 
The  Consolidated  Ubero 

Plantation  Co. 

J.  B.  Mahoney 
Geo.  Hughes 

2 

2 

No 

Yes 

167 

Mason  &  Co. 

Wm.  Winters 

2 

Yes 

168 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Michael  Quinn 

3 

Yes 

169 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Patrick  Carey 

2 

Yes 

170 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Patrick  McNamara 

2 

Yes 

J7I 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Jeremiah  J.  O'Neill 

2 

Yes 

172 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Thos.  Galvin 

3, 

Yes 

Beirer  than  Corfee 
Richer  than  coifee 
Nine-Tenths  cottee 


J. 


G.  WalKer  (^  Sorv,  Corp. 

— ^^CHICAGO   anZ  NEW  YORK-—- 

DREvSSED    BEEF  fe 


^, 

36      NORTH      STREET 

BOvSTON 

Dealers     in 

^—COAL     AND     WOOD-- 


77  SMITH  STREET 


Telephone,  Roxbury  1232-2 


CLASS  i2—GROCHRS—Co//^i7/ued 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver     quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

173 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Manuel  Silvia 

I 

Yes 

174 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Walter  Lockhart 

2 

Yes 

'75 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

C.  R.  Woodman 

6 

Yes 

176 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

James  McL,ean 

I 

Yes 

177 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

C.  H.Jones 

2 

Yes 

178 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Michael  DriscoU 

4 

Yes 

179 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Patrick  Donahue 

4 

Yes 

180 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Stephen  Gilli.s 

I 

Yes 

181 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

M.  McNiff 

2 

Yes 

182 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

John  Hartford 

2 

Yes 

183 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

John  Sullivan 

2 

Yes 

184 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Geo.  H.  Milner 

4 

Yes 

185 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Albert  Trumble 

2 

Yes 

]86 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Jas.  DeCourcey 

2 

Yes 

187 

M.  A.  Stewart 

Geo.  E.  Magoun 

I 

Yes 

188 

J.  C.  Thornton  &  Co. 

Sanford  Day 

I 

Yes 

189 

J.  C.  Thornton  &  Co. 

Maynard  D.  Hazeu 

I 

Yes 

190 

Timber]ake  &  Small 

John  J.  McCarty 

2 

Yes 

191 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Chester  Eames 

I 

Yes 

CLASS  13.- BOTTLERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  twelve  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


192 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

John  Murphy 

I 

No 

193 

Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

Geo.  vSymmes 

4 

Yes 

194 

Jos.  Gahm  &  Sou 

Chas.  Bradford 

2 

No 

195 

Chas.  S.  Gove  &  Co. 

J.  Couuhliu 

2 

Yes 

196 

Chas.  S.  Gove  &  Co. 

Albert  Winch 

2 

Yes 

197 

Chas.  S.  Gove  &  Co. 

J.  IMcNulty 

I 

Yes 

198 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

Isaac  F.  Tur])iu 

2 

Yes 

199 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

D.  F.  Sullivan 

2 

Yes 

200 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

F;.  IVr.  Fit/.patrick 

2 

No 

201 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

Jas.  R.  Jones 

2 

No 

Mill  Ofticc  Telephone,  483  Roxbury 


IClcvator  and  IMill,  200  Norfolk  Aveui 


EDWIN    D.    DODGE 

THE  DUDLEY  FEED  MILLS 

Flour,  Grain,  Hay  and  Feed 

Contents  of  Vaults  and  Cesspools 

Roxbury  District  BOSTON,  MASS. 


XelepHone 

349 

CHarlestown 


The  Modern  Blacksmith 

He  liath  no  shop  'neath  spreading  tree, 

Nor  in  a  village  doth  he  dwell  ; 
But  iu  the  busy  haunts  of  men 

Rings  loud  his  anvil ;  there  to  tell 
How  he  hath  all  facilities 

And  doth  all  work  so  much  the  better, 
And  quicker  far,  with  greater  ease — 

With  the  up  to-date  COLD  TIRE  SETTER. 


Yoxxr  Tires  Set 
in  15   Minutes. 


ROWELL,  DODGE  &   CO. 

Blacksmiths,  Wagon  Builders,  Quick  Repairs  and  Cold  Tire  Setting 

283  to  291  Rutherford  Avenue,  Charlestown.  Mass. 


Cbomas  6.  Plant  Company 

Manufacturers 

^^  QUEEN  QUALITY  ^^ 

SHOES  FOR  WOMEN 
Boston,  Mass. 


COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

M.  O'KEEFFE 


CLASvS  13— BOTTLERS— G;;///;///^'(/ 


Prize 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

202 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

W.  II.  Riley 

203 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

Michael  A.  Carr 

:o4 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

H.J.  Cole 

205 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

Jas.  T.  Buckley 

206 

Spriug  Water  Carbouating  Co. 

B.  H.  Page 

207 

Spriug  Water  Carbouating  Co. 

John  O'Couuor 

208 

Spriug  Water  Carbouatiug  Co. 

Atwood  A.  Berry 

209 

Spring  Water  Carbouatiug  Co. 

Ch3S.  A.  Slack 

210 

Spriug  Water  Carbouating  Co. 

D.  Thompson 

211 

Spriug  Water  Carbouatiug  Co. 

Fred  Foley 

212 

Spring  Water  Carbouatiug  Co. 

Harley  R.  Kellogg 

213 

Spring  Water  Carbouatiug  Co. 

P.  J.  Bushell 

No.  of 
Horset 
in  team 


Oliver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 


CLASS  J4— FURNITURE  AND  MOVERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  eight  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class 


214 

Geo.  II.  Cahill 

Everett  Dickey 

Yes 

215 

A.  H.  Davenport  Co. 

G.  A.  Goodwin 

Yes 

216 

A.  H.  Davenport  Co. 

A.  L.  Cross 

Yes 

217 

A.  H.  Davenport  Co. 

Frauk  Voudell 

No 

2IS 

Frauk  Ferdiuar:d 

Wm.  H.  Patch 

No 

219 

Frauk  Ferdiuaud 

Jas.  J.  Warreii 

No 

220 

Frauk  Ferdiuaud 

Jas.  Kelley 

No 

221 

Frauk  Ferdiuaud 

M.  E.  Ray 

No 

222 

J.  W.  &  W.  H.  Franklin 

Will.  H.  I'raukliu 

223 

Jas.  Z.  Kane 

Jas.  Z.  Kane 

224 

Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co. 

W.  D.  Dillon 

No 

CLASS  15.  — MANUFACTURERS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  twelve  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


225 
226 


Atwood  &  RIcManus 
Atwood  &  McManus 


Jos   Crouin 
Geo.  Nay 


ESTABLISHED    J  850 


5hattuck  ®»  Jones 

Fish  of  Ml  Kjinds 

OYSTERS,    GREEN    TURTLE,   TERRAPIN   AND   SOFT   CRABS 
No.   128  Faneuil  Hall  Market,   Boston 

Telephone  '  ^43^  .  Ri,i,„ond  EDWARD    B.    NEWTON 

(^  '437  ' 


George  H.  Cahill 

EXPRESS 

Boston,  Allston 

and  Brighton 


J.  T.  TIGHE  CO, 


Best  Grades     /^  A   A  T 
Family  and     tUAL 


Lowest 
Cash 
Steam  ....      '^  ^  t^M^m^  Prices 

Telephone  156  Soulh  Boston. 
Wharf,  First  St.,  foot  of  F.       I     C^      R/-wcf/^t-» 
Yard,  331  West  Fourth  St.      )     ^O.    JDOStOIl 


Don't  Swear  at  High  ink  Bills,  inky 
,^^_i__^_^_  Pmgers,  or  when  aou 
find  Mud  where  the  Ink  OUGHT  TO  BE 


TRY     A- 


CENTURY  INKSTAND 


[NSTEAD 


Prices,  No.  2  Century  Inkstand,  single,  $1.50 
No.  6  Century  Inkstand,  double,  3.00 

We  will  send  the  Century  Inkstand  to 
any  bank  or  responsible  business  concern 
on  approval. 

The  Century  Inkstand  Co.,  Boston,  Mass. 


CLASS   15— MANUFACTURKRS— n';///;///r^/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

227 

Atwocd  &  McMauus 

J.  F.  McLeod 

2 

No 

228 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Wm.  Bryson 

2 

Yes 

229 

Atwood  &  McMauus 

Thos    Barrett 

2 

Yes 

230 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Jas.  Campbell 

2 

Yes 

231 

Atwood  &  McMauus 

Oliver  Marion 

2 

Yes 

232 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Edgar  Bryson 

2 

Yes 

233 

Bay  State  Hardware  Co. 

Thos.  R.  Powers 

I 

Yes 

234 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

John  D.  McDonald 

I- 

Yes 

235 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Wra.  B.  Smith 

2 

Yes 

236 

Boston  Book  Binding  Co. 

Chas.  J.  Daly 

2. 

Yes 

236A 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

Philip  Carey 

' 

Yes 

237 

Brink  &  Buitekan 

Miles  Leonard  Johnson 

I 

Yes 

238 

Philip  Broomfield  &  Co. 

Jacob  Price 

2 

Yes 

239 

Wm.   Corbett 

Samuel  Corbett 

I 

No 

240 

J.  I'rank  Heme 

J.  Frank  Heme 

3 

241 

J.  Frank  Heme 

Arthur  W.  Heme 

2 

Yes 

241A 

A.  E.  Keuney  &  Co. 

Charles  F.  Miller 

I 

Yes 

242 

Fred  S.  Pittman 

Fred  S.  Pittman 

I 

243 

Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

John  J.  Griffin 

2 

No 

244 

Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Johh  H.  Galviu 

4 

No 

245 

Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Cabot  R.  Brewster 

I 

No 

246 

Union  Glass  Co. 

John  J.  Brady 

r 

Yes 

CLASS  16,— HAY  AND  GRAIN 

Prizes  not  exceeding  sixteen  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


247 
248 
249 
250 

251 
252 

253 
254 


F.  M.  Bond 

F.  M.  Bond 

Otis  S.  Brown  &  Co. 

Sumner  Crosby  &  Son 

E.  D.  Dodge 

F:.  D.  Dodge 

Fulton  O'Briou 

Fulton  O'Brion 


Joseph  McAdams 

James  Stewart 

John  Attridge 

Thomas  O'Rourke 

P'red  Leonard 

Elmer  Keith 

Charles  Hoffman 

John  Gibson 


Z7e/cp/ione.     /JOS '3   Oxford 


V)avici  77fi/ers  &   Co, 
Uaiiors 

5/6-/7  Co/on/a/  ^uildinff  /OO  iSoyiston  Street 


W.  L.  SNOW, 

DORCHESTER, 
Would  like  to  supply  your  table  with 

Genuine  New 
Laid  Eggs 

Received  direct  from  poultry  farmers  who 
use  gfreat  care,  A  sample  order  will  mean 
a  permanent  customer. 

P.  O.  BOX  17,  UPHAM'S  CORNER 
Dorchester,  Mass. 


K  F.  WhIITE,  V.  S 


Speckilist  ill  Diseciscs  o\ 
the  rcer  ciiKl  Liinhs,  and 

Expert  Horse. 
Shoer. 

Pecsonal  attention  given  to  shoeing. 

All  shoes  fitted  cold. 

Horses  called  for  and  returned. 

Telephone:  Richmond  1055-2. 
HOSPITAL  AND  FORGE 

IK)    WASHING  TON   ST.   NORTH 

Near  Causeway,  Boston,  Mass. 


£c/tv.   X    ^icA,    ^President 


C/ias.    7l^.    J^al/stram,    Tjreasurcr 


union   See  Company 


/7y%    U  Wharf 


Boston 


CLASS  16— HAY  AND  GRAIN— Cf ;///////«'«' 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

255 

Fulton  O'Brion 

Patrick  Bradley 

1 

Yes 

256 

Hobart  S.  Palmer 

Henry  A.  Pcro 

1 

Yes 

257 

Proctor  &  Clapp 

Charles  Campbell 

I 

No 

258 

Proctor  &  Clapp 

Walter  Caty 

I 

No 

259 

N.  T.  Robinson 

James  A.  Kennedy 

2 

Yes 

260 

W.  M.   Robinson 

B.  H.  Brown 

2 

No 

261 

W.  M.  Robinson 

M.  II.  Mowles 

I 

No 

262 

John  J.  White 

James  Noonau 

2 

Yes 

263 

John  J.  White 

David  Cowhig 

I- 

Yes 

264 

John  J.  White 

Pat  Sheehy 

I 

Yes 

265 

W.  P.  Whilteniore 

Ned  Couroy 

3. 

Yts 

266 

W.  P.  Whitteniore 

Richard  McDonald 

2. 

Yes 

267 

W.  P.  Whitteniore 

Patrick  Cltary 

2 

Yes 

268 

W.  P.  Whitteniore 

Barnard  Fay 

I 

Yes 

269 

W.  P.  Whitteniore 

Edward  Doyle 

' 

Yes 

CLASS  17.— LUMBER 

Prizes  not  exceeding  eight  in  number  may   be  awarded  in  this  Class 


270 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

Con.  Googiu 

Yes 

271 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

John  Griffin 

Yes 

272 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

Oscar  Whitman 

Yes 

273 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

William  Dunn 

Yes 

274 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

John  Haggcrty 

Yes 

275 

C.  W.  Leatherbee  Lumber  Co. 

William  Crowell 

Yes 

276 

Perkins  Wood  Working  Co. 

Edward  H.  Brooks 

Yes 

277 

John  Ouinn  &  Son  ' 

Patrick  Hannaford 

No 

278 

John  Quinn  &  Son 

John  A.  Sullivan 

No 

279 

E.  D.  Sawyer  Lumber  Co. 

John  Warren 

No 

280 

E.  D.  Sawyer  Lumber  Co. 

Peter  Duffy 

No 

281 

J.  0.  Wetherbce  Co. 

James  J.  Porter 

Yes 

282 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 

Joseph  Keough 

Yes 

283 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Donovan 

2 

Yes 

ENOS    D.    SAWYER,  Pres. 


ED>VARD    D.    SAWYER,  Treas. 


E.  D.  Sd^wyer  Lumber  Co. 

Lumber  Dealers 


24     CAMBRIDGE    STREET 


Erast    Cambridge 


Mass. 


Dr.  A.  C.  Daniels'  Dr.  A.  C.  Daniels' 


Horse  and  Cattle  Medicines 

ARE   THE  BEST  IN    THE   WORLD 

I      BE    YOUR    OWN    DOCTOR      \ 

Kverj'  package  warranted  to  please  or  money  re- 
funded. A  quarter  century's  experience  Doctor- 
ing. Stock  furnished  FREE.  Send  for  it  to 
help  your  horses. 

That  cures  any  sore.       I^argest 
box.  Best  goods.  Easiest  seller. 

That  grows  a  new  hoof  in 
three  months. 

will    prove  their 
worth  once  using 


GALL  CURE 


HOOF  GROWER 


RENOVATOR  POWDERS 
WORM  KILLER 


Sure  to  drive  out  worms. 
This  is  only  a  part. 


Can  Help  You.  MaRe  Money 

You  can  make  more  money  in  your  business  by 
keeping  your  horses  in  condition  than  by  neglect 
and  abuse.  Costs  no  more  to  keep  a  well  horse 
than  it  does  a  sick  or  lame  one.  Remember,  you 
don't  have  to  drive  a  sick  or  lame  horse  unless 
you  wish  to. 


COLIC  CURE 


The  World's  Wonder. 
It  never  fails. 


DISTEMPER  CURE  J,',;?'  "Se^n'IS'e,:;;:? 

and  I'"evLr  Cure  on  the  Market. 
Physic  Balls  always  ready. 
Absorbent  to  remove  Bunches. 
Liniments  just  made  for  L'niment. 

ricnej    alvays  bacl<  if  not  entirely  satisfied. 


GALL  CURE -THAT  CURFS  ANY  GALL 

Dr.  A.  C.  Dewniels.   172  MilK  Street,  Boston,  M^kj-j-. 


BLIINN,  MORRILL  &  CO. 
TrucKmen 


Nos.  6  Charham  Row  S  115  franKlin  SI. 


BOSTON 


— ^— use™ — 

Bensdorp's  Royal  Dutch 

cocoa 

-  FOR— ^ 


Drinking  and  Cooking' 


CLASS  18.— BREWERS 

Prizes  uot  exceeding  three  in  uuinber  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver    quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

284 

The  Roessle  Brewery 

Joseph  Hailer 

2 

Yes 

285 

The  Roessle  Brewery 

Edward  Breidenbach 

2 

Yes 

286 

The  Roessle  Brewery 

A.  Bent 

2 

Yes 

CLASS  19.— ICE 

Prizes  not  exceeding  four  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


287 

Dorchester  Ice  Company 

Archie  Mclutire 

2 

Yes 

288 

Union  Ice  Co. 

William  F.  Morrell 

2 

Yes 

289 

Union  Ice  Co. 

Joseph  D.  Madden 

2 

Yes 

290 

Union  Ice  Co. 

Michael  H.  White 

2 

No 

291 

Union  Ice  Co. 

Joseph  T.  Melanson 

2 

Yes 

CLASS  20.-~COAL 

Prizes  not  exceeding  sixteen  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class 


292 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Robert  J.  Lynch 

2 

Yes 

293 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Ed.  Wardick 

2 

Yes 

294 

Paul  G.  Coblenger 

John  Doherty 

I 

No 

295 

Paul  G.  Coblenger 

John  Sullivan 

No 

296 

Otto  Coblenger 

Wilhelm  McDowell 

Yes 

297 

Otto  Coblenger 

Patrick  Walch 

Yes 

298 

Otto  Coblenger 

James  Driver 

Yes 

299 

Martin  Gilbert 

John  R.Walsh 

No 

300 

Martin  Gilbert 

EmileJ.  Pillard 

No 

301 

Martin  Gilbert 

Michael  F.  Sullivan 

No 

302 

McGreevy  Bros. 

Joseph  McGreevy 

303 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

John  Grout 

Yes 

304 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Charles  Stewart 

Yes 

305 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

William  Donovan 

Yes 

306 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

William  Timbers 

^ 

Yes 

Established    1868 


281 

Rutherford  Ave. 


Telephone 
384  Charlestown 


Charlestown 


P.   McCALL 

(The  Harness  Manj 


D.  r.  WARREN 


Eipreee 


NEWTON  LOWER  FALLS 


dompllments  of 

Marneee 
Company 

200  Bevonsbire  St. 


NVILUIAM     QILLIQAN 

General   Contractor 

Dealer  in  Sand  and  Gravel 


TEAMING    AND     EXCAVATING 

Telephone,  209  Roxbury  Officc,  28  MecHanlc  Strcct 


CLASS  20.— Q.Ok'h— Continued 


Prize 

No. 

of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

307 

Metropolitau  Coal  Co. 

Daniel  Quiun 

2 

Yes 

308 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

William  Beecher 

2 

Yes 

309 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

William  Kenny 

2 

Yes 

310 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Euos  Lane 

Yes 

311 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Kdwin  Murnane 

No 

312 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

V .  Macmackiu 

Yes 

3f3 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Michael  Santry 

Yes 

314 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Edward  Capless 

Yes 

315 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Dennis  Council 

Yes 

316 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Con.  Driscoll 

Yes 

317 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

John  Santry 

2 

No 

CLASS  21.— CONTRACTORS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  twenty  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


3-8 

G.  H.  Doty 

Augustus  F.  Doty 

I 

Yes 

319 

John  T.  Connors 

Thomas  O'Brien 

2 

Yes 

320 

John  T.  Connors 

John  Donahue 

2 

Yes 

321 

John  T.  Connors 

Hugh  Tolan 

2 

Yes 

322 

William  Gilligan 

Frank  Donovan 

2 

Yes 

323 

William  Gilligan 

Thomas  McCarthy 

2 

Yes 

324 

William  Gilligan 

John  Kearns 

2 

No 

325 

William  Gilligan 

Chas.  Regan 

2, 

Yes 

326 

William  Gilligan 

David  Saunders 

2 

Yes 

327 

William  Gilligan 

John  Gilroy 

2 

No 

328 

William  Gilligan 

John  Sullivan 

3 

No 

329 

William  Gilligan 

Chas.  Wagner 

2 

Yes 

330 

William  Gilligan 

William  McKenna 

2- 

Yes 

331 

William  Gilligan 

William  Donecliff 

^ 

Yes 

332 

Robert  C.  Guptill 

Wm.  A.  McCuish 

I 

No 

333 

James  J.  Kelley 

Nichols  vSchaff 

2 

Yes 

334 

James  J.  Kelley 

Henry  J.  vStevens 

2 

Yes 

335 

James  J.  Kelley 

Edw.  McLaughlin 

2 

Yes 

Concord  Buggies 
Express  Wagons 
Delivery  Wagons 
rurniture  Wagons 

Telephone,  2047  Main 

Abbott-Downing 

Drays,  Caravans 
Hose  Wagons 
Ladder  Trucks 

Company 

Ambulances 
Street  Sweepers 
Street  Sprinklers 
Patrol  Wagons 

Of  CONCORD,  N.  li. 

Salesroom  and  Repair  Deparlmenl 

lip-Carts.  Sleds 

555-400  ATL/\NTIC  HVCNIE,  BOSTON 

BUY 


Chase's  Superfine  F&».wn 
Wool    Squ&.re    Blankets 

Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes* 

Look  for  the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade  Mark* 
When  Buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the  word 

===  ^^  CHASE  ^^  = 


?KENNEYSI^^ERBURy(bl«PANY; 


Designers.  Manufacturers  and  JoU 

Electric,  Gas  ana  Oii/ 
HXTUMEiS 


CIvASS  21.— CONTRACTORS— r<;;///;///^^/ 


Prize 

No. 
of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

336 

Jauies  J.  Kelley 

Michael  Brennan 

337 

Jatues  J.  Kelley 

Ch  irles  Nohl 

338 

John  Kelley 

James  Kelley 

339 

John  Kelley 

William   Hubner 

34o 

John  Kelley 

Thomas  Kelley 

341 

John  McNealy 

Jerrymiah  Collins 

342 

John  McNealy 

Owen  J.  McNealy 

343 

H.  P.  Oakman's  Sons 

George  R.  Tarbell 

344 

II.  P.  Oakman's  Sous 

Andrew  Coyle 

346 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

Stanley  Boyleu 

347 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

John  Boylen 

348 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

Andy  Burns 

349 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

E'hvard  Russell 

350 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

Jerry  Hartnett 

351 

J.  H.  Sullivan 

John  Bowen 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

I 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2- 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

2 

Yes 

I 

No 

I 

Yes 

2 

No 

2 

No 

2 

No 

I 

No 

I 

No 

2 

Yes 

CLASS  2Z  — TRUCKMEN  — Singles 

Prizes  not  exceeding  sixteen  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


352 

H.  W.  Annable 

T.  Mulvey 

No 

353 

H.  W.  Annable 

William  McFeeley 

Yes 

354 

T.  W.  Berry 

Horatio  J.  Stebbius 

Yes 

355 

T.  W.  Berry 

Fred  vS.  Johnston 

Yes 

356 

Blinn,  Morrill.  &  Co. 

William  Clavcrn 

No 

357 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

John  Kelley 

No 

358 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

Ed.  White 

Yes 

359 

Earle's  Express  &  Forwarding  Co. 

Andy  Dreghorn 

No 

360 

Earle's  Express  &  ForwardiugCo. 

Frank  Sheptrd 

Yes 

361 

Earle's  Express  &  Forwarding  Co. 

Arthur  Terrell 

No 

362 

Earle's  Express  &  ForwardiugCo. 

Ed.    Pooler 

^ 

No 

363 

Earle's  Express  &  ForwardiugCo. 

G.  Pooler 

No 

364 

Earle's  Express  &  ForwardiugCo. 

John  Thomas 

No 

COMPLIMENTS      OF 

J.   H.  RICHARDSON 

Cosmopolitan   Boarding' 
&.nd    Baiting'    Stable 


Corner    Pitts    and    SoutK    Margin    Streets,    Boston,    Mas! 

Stock  Farm,  ANDOVER,  MASS. 


R.  S.  FITCH 

>^ 

IReal  Betate 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

^Insurance 

Flsk  &  Amsdcn 

n  3    Devonshire   Street, 
BOSTON 

Dorchester  Property  a  Specially 

Roc™  2,.        T.,epbo„es=   {    ^^."'41^4. 

dolumbia 
1Roab  Stables 

HARRY  E.  WRIGHT  ' 

Telephone  Connection. 


iJ--\^^: 


CLASS  22.— TRUCKMEN— Siugle-Cy;///;///f<^ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
in  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

365 

Earle's  Express  &  Forwarding  Co. 

Bert  Newbegiu 

Yes 

366 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

J.  C.   Lee 

Yes 

367 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

E.  J.  INIagner 

Yes 

368 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

C.   F.  Wigley 

Yes 

369 

Fisk  &  Anisden 

John  A.  McNamara 

Yes 

370 

W.  L.  Hallett 

Connie  Bailey 

No 

371 

William  McClung 

John  Watson 

Yes 

372 

McKenne}'  &  Waterbury  Co. 

John  Bushee 

No 

373 

E.  J.  Murphy 

Timothy  Murphy 

Yes 

374 

Edw.  A.  Sears 

Daniel  Crowley 

Yes 

375 

A.  n.  Shedd  &  Co. 

William  F.  Mueser 

Yes 

376 

A.  H.  Shedd  &  Co. 

William  Irwin 

No 

377 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Frank  Peck 

Yes 

378 

F.  J.  Walker  &  Co. 

John  A.  Brander 

I 

No 

379 

Webber  &  Co. 

Remus  Burt 

No 

380 

S.  B.  Wiley's  Sons 

Isaac  M.  Duddy 

Yes 

CLASS  23.—  TRUCKMEN  —  Doubles 

Prizes  not  exceeding  twenty-eight  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


381 
382 
383 
384 
385 
386 

387 
388 
389 
390 
391 
392 
393 


H.  W.  Annable 

E.  Patterson 

2 

No 

H.  W.  Annable 

Thos.  O'Hara 

2 

No 

H.  W.  Annable 

W.  Selfridge 

2 

Yes 

T.  W.  Berry 

John  F.  Mahan 

2 

Yes 

Bliun,  Morrill  &  Co. 

W.  A.  Buchanan 

2 

No 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

D.  J.  Buckley 

2 

No 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

James  Garmon 

2 

No 

B.  E.  Ry.  Co. 

Thomas  Murray 

2 

Yes 

B.  E.  Ry.  Co. 

John  Coffey 

2 

Yes 

W.  C.  Bray 

Otto  W.  Kettell 

2 

No 

W.  C.  Bray 

W.  Parrott 

2 

No 

W.  C.  Bray 

L.  L.  Cook 

2 

No 

W.  C.  Bray 

E.  P.  Mclntire 

2 

No 

T.      TIGHE      Sz      SONS 

General  .  •  . 
Teamsters 

36     ATLANTIC     AVENUE! 

Order  Box 
Room  911,  Exchange  Building,  Boston  Telephone  Connection 

THOMAS    NV.    BERRY 

macbmerv  mover,  Cigbt  m  f)^m  Ceanting 

MACHINERY    BOXED,    CRATED    AND   SHIPPED 
5AFES  HOISTED  AT  A  VERY  REASONABLE  RATE 

^^189    LINCOLN    STREET 


JOHN  BRADLEY 

Contractor  and   Contractors'  Material 

SAND,  GRAVEL  AND  LOAM  FOR  SALE 
CELLARS  BUILT  AND  STONE  FURNISHED 

LANDSCAPE    GARDENING 
134  WRENTHAiVl  STREET  ASHMONT 

DowD    Brothers 
BlacKsmitHs 

55    Ralmer    Street,    Roxbury 


CIvASS  23.— TRUCKMEN- Doubles— a?7///w«^rf 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  ol 
Fiorses 
n  team 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

394 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

W.  S.  McKiudey 

2 

Yes 

395 

A.  M.  Davis 

Edwin  P.  Hudson 

2 

Yes 

396 

Earle's  Kxpress  &  Forwardiug  Co. 

John  Davis 

2 

No 

397 

Earle's  Express  &  Forwardiug  Co. 

Frank  Batchelder 

2 

No 

39« 

Earle's  Express  &  Forwardiug  Co. 

Daniel  Minnohan 

2 

No 

399 

Fifield,  Richardsou  &  Co. 

Alleu  McDonald 

2 

Yes 

400 

Fifield,  Richardsou  &  Co. 

H.  F.  Long 

2 

Yes 

401 

Fifield,  Richardsou  &  Co. 

Martin  Toohey 

2 

No 

402 

Fifield,  Richardsou  &  Co. 

M.  J.  John  sou 

2 

Yes 

403 

Fifield,  Richardsou  &  Co. 

M.  Connor 

2 

Yes 

404 

Fisk&  Amsdeu 

Andrew  Mahouey 

2 

Yes 

405 

Fisk  &  Amsdeu 

Edward  J.  Lynch 

2 

Yes 

4c6 

E.  S.  Harris 

Joseph  Harris 

2 

Yes 

407 

G.  A.  I^arrabee 

James  Douglas 

2 

No 

408 

G.  A.  Larrabee 

Watson  Ringer 

2 

Yes 

409 

Wm.  McClung 

Henry  Smith 

2 

No 

410 

Wm.  McClung 

William  McClung 

2 

No 

411 

T.  Tighe  &  vSons 

John  Collins 

2 

Yes 

4[2 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

John  Doherty 

2 

Yes 

4'3 

T.  Tighe  &  Sous 

Jas.  Akley 

2 

Yes 

414 

T.  Tighe  &  Sous 

Henry  Philbrick 

2 

Yes 

415 

T.  Tighe  &  Sous 

Thos.  Nagle 

2 

Yes 

416 

T.  Tighe  &  Sous 

Albert  Hutchinson 

2 

Yes 

417 

T.  Tighe  &  vSous 

Edward  Tighe 

2 

Yes 

418 

F.J.  Walker  &  Co. 

Edward  Robbius 

2 

No 

419 

John  Williams 

F.  J.  Weaver 

2 

No 

420 

John  Williams 

H.  W.  Barney 

2 

No 

421 

Youldeu,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

Richard  Sullivan 

2 

Yes 

422 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

James  Fisher 

2 

Yes 

423 

Youldeu,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

Eidward  Reardon 

2 

Yes 

424 

Youldeu,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

James  T:)elauo 

2 

Yes 

425 

Youldeu,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

James  l'"inu 

2 

Yes 

GEO.  P.  POTK 

KSTAIil.lSHKD   IN 

1830 

II.   S.    RICH.^RDSON 

J.  L.  BOWLBY 

A.   1'.   POTK 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co 

Jjruckmen  and 
forwarders 

Bonded    Teams    for    Custom    House    Business 

Office^  185  Franklin  Street^  Boston 

Room    1 


COMPLIMENTS        OF 

R.  H.  WHITE  CO. 


C  O  M   P  Iv  I  M  K  N  T  vS     ()  F 

N.  T.  ROBINSON 


0.   S.    Woodberrj/ 

TjrucJcman 
3/0  J^tiantic   J^venue,    Boston 


CLASS  23.— TRUCKMEN- 

-Doubles — Continued 

Prize 

No. 

ot 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 
intean, 

Driver  quali- 
fied for  Certifi- 
cate 

426 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

James  Russell 

2 

Yes 

428 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

George  Morandi 

2 

Yes 

429 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

Timothy  White 

2 

Yes 

430 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

John  Conway 

2 

No 

431 

4^2 


CLASS  24.— TRUCKMEN -Threes 

Prizes  not  exceeding  two  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


John  Williams 
John  Williams 


W.  R.  Frawley 
Thomas  Caffrey 


CLASS  25.  —  TRUCKMEN— Fours 

Prizes  not  exceeding  four  in  nixmber  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


433 

B.  E.  Ry.  Co. 

Peter  Dolan 

4 

Yes 

434 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

C.  J.  Sullivan 

4 

No 

435 

J.  S.  Hilliard  &  Son 

Thomas  Carghill 

4 

Yes 

436 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Patrick  Tighe 

4 

Yes 

437 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Thomas  Legere 

4 

Yes 

CLASS  26.-  MULES 

Prizes  not  exceeding  four  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


438 

Charles  S.  Gove  &  Co. 

J.  Bowshell 

I 

Yes 

439 

G.  B.  Howard  Co. 

Thomas  Back 

2 

No 

440 

John  Williams 

Frank   Silvie 

3 

No 

441 

John  Williams 

J.  C.  Read 

3 

No 

442 

John  Williams 

J.  H.  Keating 

2 

No 

CLASS  27.— HOSPITALS 

Prizes  not  exceeding  two  in  number  may  be  awarded  in  this  Class. 


443 
441 


The  Galvin  Emergency  & 
General  Hospital 

Boston  Veterinary  Hospital 


Michael  A.  F.  Hayes 
James  Blakeley 


A 


C.   F.   HOVEY  &   CO 


IMPORTERS  AND  RETAILERS  OF 

DRY  GOODS 

Sole  Agents  for  Boston  for  the  Celebrated 

Alexandre  Kid  Gloves 

MEDALS    AWARDED    THE    MANUFAC- 
TURERS   AT    EVERY    WORLD'S    FAIR 


33  SUMMER  STREET  BOSTON 
42  AVON  STREET  : 


MERRIFIELD   ^  CO. 

Truckmen 

55  arid   63   Blackstone   Street 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS. 

Prize,  :i  silver  medal  of  the  value  of  $10  00  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who 
has  been  tli(>  longest  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  em[)l()ver,  or  of  the  pre- 
decessor in  business  of  that  emplover.  In  addition,  the  Association  will  gi\-e  a 
bronze  medal  to  every  driver  whose  term  of  service  is  twentj^  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 

NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Length  of 
Service 

r.   Carney 

INIctropolitan  Coal  Co. 

39  Years 

John  Carroll 

City  of  Newt  n 

37      " 

Timothy  Foley 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

36      " 

Michael  Murray 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

33      " 

Solon  J.  Richardson 

City  Laundry 

30      " 

Frank  Sturtevant 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

28      " 

Gro.  C.  Lienhard 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

25      " 

Clarence  11.  Jones 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

20      " 

Philip  Carey 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

19      " 

Geo.  H.  Hill 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

i8      " 

William  Donecliff 

William  Gilligan 

17       " 

Frank  Reavey 

Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 

15      " 

A  Special  Prize  of  a  Draught  Spring  for  the  best  four  in  the  Truckmen's  Class 
is  offered  by  the  Bcecher  Draft  Spring  Company. 

WE  ARE  THE  LARGEST  PRODUCERS  OF 


WAGONS 


IN    THE    WORLD. 


CHBUCK&CO 

SIGN    MAKERS    AND    PRINTERS 

299  Washington  Street,  Boston 


John   T  c  c  ki  i:  y 

footer  mc\  Mekil  Worker 

Slntc,  (Copper,  T\\\  (ind  drcivcl  l^x^tlnc) 
(Kilvnnizcd    Iron    (iiul    Copper   Worlds 


TIz  L  I:  P  H  ONI:     I  IGa-'S     II  y\V  Tl  ]\  Q  W  liT 

OrriCE,  15  NOPTH  GIXWI:  .STPEET,  BOSTON 

T  I:  i\  M  I  N  G 

C  B.  SMITH  &  BKO. 

Wholesale  Grocers 


lai(l(|imrrcrs  lor 


State  House  Tlour 

4,')- 51   rulton  Street,  ISoston 


UPHAM'S  COQWJ^  STAI^rE  CO. 


Telephone 
M(,-2  Dc\c\\csh- 


HcicU,  Bocirciiixj  cind  Livery  Skil)le 

HcK  I'vS  for  cill  Ocai.sioivs 
7i)7  DUDLIiV  5TPI:l:r,    I  )0  PC  1 11:511: 1^  /WASS. 


CoinpliinenLs 

of 

A  rrlend 


Alderman,  Dr.  H.  L. 
AlliD,  H.  N. 

Bacon, Joel  V. 
Barnes,  Dr.  William  E- 
Beckett,   Dr.  E.   C. 
Blackwood,  Dr.  Thomas 
Brigham,  William 
Buck,  Dr.  Howard 
Bunker,  Dr.  Madison 
Bush,  W.  W. 

Choat,  E.  C. 
Coldwell,  P:iias 
Cressy,  D.  M. 
Cummings,  Charles 
Choate,  E.  C. 

Draper,  Dr.  A.  W. 
Dwelley,  A.  W. 

Ethier,  Napoleon 

Fitch,  Dr.  A.  H. 
Frothingham,  Dr.  Laugdon 
Gallup,  H.  P. 
Glancy,  W.J. 
Goodrich,  R.  W. 

Harrington,  G.  W. 


LIST  OF  JUDGES,  1 904. 

Hoffman,  E.  H. 
Hill,  Dr.  A.  G. 
Howard,  Dr.  L.  H. 
Hopkins,  T.  J. 
Hutchinson,  J.  A. 
Hill,  Dr.  A.  G. 

Jewell,  C.  H. 
Johnson,  Arthur  R. 

Kenuey,  A.  E. 
Kenuey,  James 

Da  Baw,  Dr.  W.  L. 
Dee,  Dr.  George 

Mauley,  Dowell 
Matthews,  Joseph  B. 
Marshall,  E-  H. 
May,  Dr.  A.  W. 
McCall,  P. 
McCall,  Frank  H. 
McManus,  H.  P. 
McNeal,  M. 
McKeuua,  Dr.  E.  P. 
INIcKenney,  J.  D. 
McLeod,  A.  B. 
Miller,  P.  N. 

Parlin,  S.  W. 
Philpot,  John 


Philpot,  Robert 
Pierce,  Dr.  B.  D. 
Porter,  Theron  H. 
Pugsley,  J.  O. 

Robinson,  J.  E. 
Robinson,  N.  T. 
Rogers,  Dr.  H.  P. 

Shea.  Daniel 
Shea,  Thomas 
Souther,  Dr.  H.  A. 
Smith,  Louis 

Teeling,  Ben 
Teeling,  Frank 
Tenney,  George  B. 
Tighe,  Thomas  F. 
Trow,  John 

Underwood,  T.  W. 

Wales,  S.  W. 
Walker,  E.  D. 
Waters,  J.  F. 
White,  Dr.  A,  F. 
White,  Dr.  W.  T. 
Wright,  Harry  E. 
Whittemore,  W.  P. 
Winslow,  W.  C. 
Wilkins,  F.  D. 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS,  1904 


Abbott-Downing  Co. 

Abrams,  Myer 

Atkinson,  A.  F. 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Ud. 

Bartlett,  S.  L. 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Berry,  Thomas  W. 

Berry,  C.  &  Co. 

Blue  Ribbon  Laundry 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Bond,  F.  M. 

Boston  Basket  Co. 

Biggi  &  Leverone 

Boston  Veterinary  Hospital 

Bradley,  John 

Breck,  Joseph  &  Sons 

Brockway,  L.  H. 

Cahill,  George  H. 

Century  Manfg.  &  Trading  Co. 

City  Laundry 

Chase,  L.  C. 


Chameleon  Oil  Co. 
Columbia  Road  Stables 
Connor,  John  T. 
Cronon  &  Foss 
Crosby,  Sumner  &  vSou 
Crowley,  C.  F. 
Daniels,  Dr.  A,  C,  Corp. 
Dodge,  E.  D. 
Dorchester  Ice  Co. 
Dowd  Bros. 
Faulkner  &  Gleason 
Ferdinand,  F. 
Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co. 
Feeney,  John 
Fisk  &  Amsdeu 
Fitch,  R.  S. 
Forgie,  Jas.  &  Sons 
Gahm,  Jos.  &  Son 
Gilligan,  William 
Harrison,  Robert  Co. 
Hilliard,  J.  S. 
Hood,  H.  P.  &  Sons 


Hoover,  S.  C. 
Hovey,  C.  F.  &  Co. 
Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co. 
Howard,  W.  B. 
Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 
Leatherbee,  Andrew  F. 
Loudon  Harness  Co. 
Lowney,  Walter  M.  Co. 
Lyman,  H.  K. 
Me  Call,  P. 
McGreevey,  Joseph 
McKenney  &  Waterbury 
Merrifield  &  Co. 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 
Middleby,  J.  Jr  ,  Inc. 
IMiller  &  Kennett 
Myers,  David  &  Co. 
O'Keeffe,  M. 
Packard,  J.  D.  &  Sons 
Pierce,  S.  S.  Co. 
Perkins  W^ood  Working  Co. 
Plant,  Thomas  G.  Co. 


,:^ 


CUNICSAMDUTVlSnS 

ALL  HOURS      ^   ^  SRCI^UST 
OAY"°NIGHT.i  J:  9  WmVXB 
BOARD     i~ 


r 


;  FECIAL  WTEHTlOl 


1:1 


T.   J.  PRIEST 


M.  A.  NEVENS 


T.  J.   PRIEST  (a  CO. 

Boarding,  Baiting,   Liuery   and  Sale  Stable 


First-Class  Horse  Clipping  done  by  Electricity 


Nos.   70,   72   and   74   Northampton    Street 


Shoeing  Forge,  Reed  Street 


TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  325 


Boston,    Mass. 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS,  J  904 -Continued 


Proctor  Bros. 
Proctor  &  Clapp 
Priest,  T.  J.  &  Co. 
Pureoxia  Co. 
Revere  Rubber  Co. 
Richardson,  J.  H. 
Robinson,  W.  M. 
Robinson,  N.  T. 
Roessle  Brewery 
Rowell,  Dodge  &  Co, 
Sabin,  Charles  W. 
Sawyer,  E.  D. 
Shattuck  &  Jones 


Shepard,  Norwell  Company 

Snow,  William  L. 

Spring  Water  Carbonating  Co. 

Smith,  C.  B.  &  Bro. 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co. 

Sumner's  Market 

Sullivan,  John  H. 

Squirrell  Brand  Salted  Nut  Co. 

Taylor  Bros.  T^aundry 

Tighe,  J.  T.  &  Co. 

Tighe,  T.  &  Sons 

Tuttle's  Elixir  Co. 


Tuttle,  II.  A. 
Union  Ice  Company 
Upham's  Corner  vStable  Co. 
Walker,  J.  G.  &  Son 
Warren,  I).  F. 
Washburn,   Crosl)y  Co. 
Williams,  John 
White,  Dr.  A.  F. 
White,  R.  H   Co. 
Woodberry,  D.  S. 
Woods,  John  M.  &  Co. 
Youlden,  Smith  &   IIo])kins 


Agassiz,  R.  L. 
Allen,  C.  W. 
Angell,  Geo.  T. 
Appleton,  Mrs.  Wm. 
Appletou,  Dr.  Wm. 
Atwood,  Joshua,  3d 
Bancroft,  Gen.  W.  A. 
Bartlett,  N.  S. 
Bartol,  Dr.  John  W. 
Beal,  Mrs.  Boylston 
Beal,  Boylston 
Beebe,  Mrs.  J.  Arthur 
Beebe,  E.  Piersou 
Beebe,  Franklin  H. 
Blake,  Mrs.  Arthur  W. 
BuUard,  Stephen 
Burr,  I.  T.,  Jr. 
Burnett,  Harry 
Campbell,  C.  A.     • 
Cash 

Carr,  Samuel 
Clarke,  Randolph  K. 
Cobb,  John  Storer 
Coduian,  Mrs.  Martha  C. 
Crocker,  Geo.  G. 
*Cox,  Wm.  E. 
Cunningham,  Fred 
Curtis,  Miss  A. 
Dodge,  A.  L. 
Eliot,  Mrs.  Samuel 
Fay,  Miss  Katherine 
Fay,  Miss  Sara  B. 
Ferdinand,  Frank 
Gahm  &  Son,  Jos. 
Gannett,  vSaniuel 
Grew,  Edward  W. 
H.  M.  C. 


CONTRIBUTORS  IN  1903 

Harrington,  G.  W. 
Hemenway,  Augustus 
Hill,  Dr.  Andrew  G. 
Hilliard,  J.  S. 
Hood  &  Son,  II.  P. 
Houghton  Co.,  The  A   J. 
Hudson,   Mrs.  J.  E. 
Hunt,  Wm.  D. 
Inches,  George  B. 
Jacques,  Herbert 
Jarvis,  Miss  Florence 
Jordan  Marsh  Co. 
Kennedy,  Miss  Louise 
Lawrence,  R.  Ashton 
*Lawrence,  Mrs.  Abbott 
Lawrence,  Amory  A. 
Lawrence,  John 
Lawsou,  Thomas  W. 
Lever  Bros.  (Limited) 
Lombard,  G.  B. 
Lowell,  Miss  Amy 
Lyman,  Miss  Florence 
Mandell,  Geo.  S. 
May,  F.  G. 
McCall,  P.  W. 
McLean,  I.  N. 
Merwin,  H.  C. 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 
Middleby,  Joseph,  Jr. 
McMillan,  Alexander 
McDonald,  P.  J. 
Noone,  Geo.  H. 
Odgers,  Geo. 
Parker,  Francis  S. 
Parsons,  The  Misses 
Peabody,  Philip  G. 
Peters,  Francis  A. 


Peters,  Austin 
Philpot,  Robert 
Phillips,  Mrs.  J.  C. 
Pierce  Co.,  S.  S 
Pitman,  F.  S. 
P.  O.  Pox  1946  Boston 
Quimby,  W.  D. 
Reuter  Co.,  The 
Rhodes,  F.  F. 
Richardson  &  Co.,  Chas. 
Rackemann,  Chas.  S. 
Rogers,  Dr.  Howard  P. 
Rowell,  W.  A. 
Russell,  Miss  Marian 
Sabin,  Chas.  W. 
Salmon,  John 
Sav\ telle  &  Co.,  F.  W. 
Shaw,  Francis 
Shattuck  &  Jones 
Silsljee,  Geo.  vS. 
Smith,  J.  H. 
vSnllivan,  John  H. 
Stanifo.'d,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Stearns  Lumber  Co. 
Sturgis,  Mrs.  Robt.  S. 
vSturtevant,  L.  J. 
Thayer,  Col.  John  E. 
Thorndike.  Dr.  T.  W. 
Tufts,  Nathan  F. 
W^arren,  S    D. 
Water  Co.,  Pure  Oxia 
Washburn  Crosby  Co. 
White,  A.  F. 
White,  R.  II. 
Williams,  John 
Winslow,  W.  C. 
York,  Chas.  L. 

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Appletou,  Mrs.  Wm. 

Bancroft,  Geu.  W.  A. 

Beebe,  H.  Pierson 

Beehe,  F.  H. 

Beebe,  Mrs.  J.  Arthur 

Bigelow,  A.  vS. 

Bird,  Miss  Harriet  G. 

Brooks,  Peter  C. 

Bullard,  Stephen 

Burr,  1.  T  ,  Jr. 

Campbell,  C.  A. 

Carr,  vSamuel 

Cunningham,  Frederic 

Oaland,  Tucker 

Doty,  (jcorge  H. 

Eliot,  Mrs.  Samuel 


I'crdinand,  Frank 
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Fox,  Mrs.  Caroline  A. 
Frothingham,  Mrs.  FUlward 
Gardiner,  Dr.  Edward  H. 
Grew,  Edward  W. 
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Hudson,  Mr.-^.  J.  E. 
Hunt,  William  D. 
Jacques,  Herbert 
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Kennedy,  Miss  Louise 
Kidner,  Rev.  Reuben 
Lawrence,  Amory  A. 
Lawrence,  R.  A. 
Lyman,  Miss  Florence 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 
Parsons,  The  Misses 
Peabody,  F.  E- 
Peters,  Francis  A. 


Phillips,  Mrs  John  C. 
Phillips,  Miss  Mary  F. 
Prev.  Cruelty  Animals  Soc. 
Proctor,  George  O. 
Putnam,  Mrs.  Sara  G. 
Purcoxia  Co. 
Quimby,  W.  I). 
Rackemann,  Chas.  vS. 
Roosevelt,  Miss  Katherine 
Russell,  Miss  ]\Iarian 
Shaw,  Francis 
Stackpole,  Miss  Roxanna 
Staniford,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Thayer,  Mrs.  Ezra  R. 
Thayer,  Col.  John  E- 
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Tufts,  Nathan  &  Sons 
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White,  R.  H. 


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BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


1905 


CATALOGUE  xjiji^,^ -i^Ojvjumjuj^ 


IcBtnn  Wnvk  i^nv^t  faraii^ 

THIRD   ANNUAL    PARADE 

-^TTT'  ^^^^  3''^^'  '905     ^f- 


1905 

PRESS  OF  •  C  •  H  •  BUCK  •  &  ■  CO 
BOSTON 


DIRECTORS 


R.   A.  LAWKEXCP:,  PiiK.siDEXT,    Devonsliiic  Building 

R.   K.   CLARKE,.  Vice-President,    72  Lincoln  Street 

C.   S.  RACKEMANN,  Vice-Presidext,   23  Court  Street 

H.  C.   MERWm,   Secretary,  State  PIou.se,  Room  35G 

AUSTLV  PETERS,   M.R.CW.S.,  Treasurer,  State  House,  Room  188 

JOSIirA   ATWOOD,  3d,   City  Hall 

JOHN  W.  BARTOL,  M.    D.,    1  Chestnut  Street 

J.   H.   JEWETT,   Boston  Herald 

ARTHUR  PERRIX,  Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline 

AV.  D.   QULMBY,   (^  Merrimae  Street 

J.   H.    SMITH,   571   Atlantic  Avenue 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


appeared  in  the  Boston  Transeript  which 
ton  of  a  work  horse  parade.  This  sug- 
ion  caught  the  eye  of  Mr.  K.  A.  Lawrence,  who  had  long  de- 
'  sired  to  see  such  a  parade  cstablislied  in  Boston,  and  who  was 
familiar  with  the  working  of  the  London  and  Liverpool  cart  horse 
parade  societies.  ]Mr.  Lawrence  called  upon  the  writer  of  the  Transcript  article, 
the  present  Secretary  of  the  Association,  and  it  was  agreed  between  them  that  an 
attempt  should  be  made  hi  this  direction. 

Very  few  persons  appeared  to  be  interested  in  the  i)roject,  but  after  some  de- 
lay an  association  was  formed,  with  the  following  officers  : — President,  R.  A.  Law- 
rence ;  Secretary,  H.  C.  Merwin  ;  Treasurer,  Dr.  Austin  Peters ;  Directors, 
Joshua  Atwood,  3d  ;  R.  K.  Clarke,  H.  K.  Lyman,  Arthur  Perrin,  C.  S.  Rackemann. 
Mr.  John  H.  Jewett,  of  the  Herald,  and  Mr.  Frank  G.  Trott,  of  the  Globe,  were 
elected  honorary  members.  The  first  intention  was  to  hold  the  parade  on  Labor 
Day,  11)02.  It  was  found,  however,  that  the  time  was  too  short ;  moreover,  the 
selection  of  Labor  Day  was  disapproved  by  many  teamsters,  and  for  these  reasons 
the  parade  was  postponed  to  Memorial  Da}^  iSIay  oO,  1903.  Early  in  the  spring, 
preparations  were  begun,  Mr.  Clarke  becoming  Vice-President,  and  Mr.  AY.  D. 
Quimby,  a  master  truckman,  being  added  to  the  list  of  directors.  It  was  Mr. 
(^uimby  Avho  suggested  the  scheme  of  drivers*  certificates,  a  valuable  feature  of  the 
parade,  and  certainly  an  improvement  upon  the  English  system.  The  conditions 
ui)on  which  these  certificates  are  awarded  will  be  found  stated  Ixdow. 

The  prospect  was  discouraging,  contributions  at  first  came  in  slowly,  and  some 
3000  printed  circulars  which  had  been  sent  through  the  mail  appeared  to  have  gone 
into  the  waste  basket  unread.  The  Directors,  however,  were  optimistic,  and  when 
the  President  of  the  Association  de})().sited  a  thousand  dollar  bond  with  the  Treas- 
urer as  a  guaranty  fund,  they  felt  sure  of  ultimate  success.     Gradually,  too,  the 


owners  of  work-horsos  awoki'  to  the  .situation,  and  when  the  entries  closed  they 
were  found  to  number  four  hundred  and  fifty-four. 

The  Association  obtained  in  contributions  the  sum  of  $1,71)6.00,  and  as  the 
running  expenses  were  very  slight,  almost  the  whole  of  this  sum  was  devoted  to 
the  parade.  Over  five  hundred  dollars  were  distributed  in  cash  prizes,  as  follows  : 
Fifty  first  i)rizes  of  four  dollars  each  ;  fifty  second  prizes  of  three  dollars  each  ;  fifty 
third  prizes  of  two  dollars  each  ;  fifty  fourth  prizes  of  one  dollar  each.  Some 
special  prizes  were  also  awarded  by  the  Association,  one  in  particular  to  Old  King 
Coal,  a  famous  black  hoi-se  of  great  size  and  beauty,  belonging  to  the  Metropolitan 
Coal  Company.  King  Coal,  probably  the  best  known  horse  in  Boston,  is  the  proud 
possessor  of  eighteen  blue  ribbons  won  by  him  at  various  horse  shows.  He  headed 
the  procession,  led  by  the  negro  teamster  who  for  many  years  drove  him  and  liis 
mate. 

In  addition  to  the  money  prizes,  ribbons,  costing  fift\' cents  apiece,  were  given 
with  each  prize,  and  also  a  diploma  for  the  owner.  These  diplomas,  as  well  as  the 
certificates  for  the  drivers  entitled  to  them,  were  handsomely  engraved  on  good 
paper,  and  many  of  them  have  been  framed  by  the  recipients. 

It  is  no  exaggeration  to  say  that  the  parade  was  a  triumphant  success.  The 
procession  was  about  four  miles  long,  and  the  greatest  enthusiasm  was  shown,  both 
by  exhibitors  and  spectators.  The  drivers  cared  little  or  nothing  for  the  money 
which  they  received  ;  Avhat  they  were  thinking  of  was  the  possible  honor  to  be 
bestowed  upon  their  horses,  and  indirectly  upon  themselves  ;  and  many  of  them, 
when  they  approached  the  reviewing  stand  where  the  prizes  were  awarded,  were 
observed  to  be  pale  with  apprehension.  Roughly  speaking  every  other  man  re- 
ceived a  prize,  and  yet,  as  the  officers  of  the  Association  found  to  their  sorrow, 
many  of  the  drivers  were  grievously  disappointed  at  the  failure  of  their  horses  to 
obtain  a  ribbon. 

The  Chief  Marshal  of  the  })arade  was  Mr.  R.  K.  Clarke,  and  the  Assistant 
Marshal,  Mr.  Joshua  Atwood,  od.  Dr.  Peters,  the  head  of  the  State  Cattle  Bureau 
took  charge  of  the  Judges.  These  three  gentlemen  were  well  mounted,  and  })re- 
sented  that  semi-militarj^  semi-sporting  appearance  which  was  proper  to  the  occasion. 
The  diplomas  and  certificates,  the  artistic  excellence  of  which  has  been  remarked  by 
many,  were  designed  by  Mr.  Arthur  Perrin. 

Soon  after  the  first  parade,  the  Association  was  incorporated  under  the  laws  of 
Massachusetts,  this  being  done  under  the  direction  and  at  the  expense  of  C.  S.  Racke- 
mann,    Esq.,   upon   whose  legal  and  practical    judgment    the    Association  greatly 

4 


relies.  Mr.  Jcwctt,  of  the  Boston  Ilenild,  and  Mr.  Smith,  a  U'adnii>-  nuMnlx'r  of  the 
Master  Teamsters'  Association,  who  now  became  directors,  had  contributed  very 
mucli  to  tlie  success  of  the  first  i)arade  by  tlieir  intelligent  and  eneigetic  assistance. 
Tile  otlier  new  director.  Dr.  John  W.  Bartol,  is  a  practicing  })hysician,  and  a  mem- 
ber of  the  State  Ik^ard  of  Health. 

The  second  parade,  held  May  30,  1904,  was  substantially  a  du})lication  of  the 
first,  except  that  the  number  of  prizes  was  increased,  and  that  some  new  classes  WTre 
added.  The  most  important  of  these  was  the  Class  for  Old  Horses,  open  to  all 
horses  that  were  in  active  service  at  the  time  of  the  entry  and  had  been  owned  and 
used  by  the  person  making  the  entry,  or  by  his  predecessor  in  business,  for  not 
less  than  ten  years  prior  to  the  entr3\ 

This  class  proved  to  be  the  most  interesting  feature  of  the  parade.  Thirty-two 
veterans,  all  in  good  condition,  appeared  to  contest  for  the  prizes,  and  their  sleek 
coats,  fearless  eyes  and  alei-t  ears  were  an  object  lesson  in  the  treatment  of  horse- 
flesh, showing  what  good  care  and  kind  usage  will  do  to  })rolong  the  life  and  pre- 
serve the  strength  of  the  animal. 

The  prizes  and  their  generous  donors  were  as  follows  : 

1st  Prize,  a  gold  medal  of  the  value  of  $20.00,  offered  by  the  Massachusetts 
Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  Animals,  through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq. 

2d  Prize,  $10.00,  offered  b}^  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 

3d  Prize,  $5,00,  offered  by  Mr.  W.  1).  Quimby. 

4th  Prize,  $4.00,  offered  by  the  Rev.  Reuben  Kidner. 

In  addition,  fourteen  highly  commended  certificates,  with  prizes  of  one  dollar 
each,  were  offered  by  the  Association.  The  winners  of  the  four  prizes  were  as 
follows:  1st,  The  Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.'s  "Chubb";  2d,  the  J.  T.  Tighe 
Co.'s  "Charlie";  3d,  Mr.  X.  M.  Appley's  "Billy";  4th,  Fifield,  Richardson  & 
Co's  "  Tom." 

Tlie  other  new  class  was  for  Veteran  Drivers,  a  silver  medal  being  offered  by 
the  American  Humane  Education  Society  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  had 
been  the  longest  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer,  or  of  the  employer's 
predecessor  in  business.  The  medal  was  Avon  by  Mr.  P.  Carney,  an  employee  of 
the  Metropolitan  Coal  Company,  and  its  predecessor,  for  39  jx-ars.  The  chestnut 
horse  driven  by  ]\Ir.  Carne}^  also  took  a  blue  ribbon  :  and  both  man  and  horse  may 
still  be  seen  working  daily  in  the  streets  of  Boston.  Other  veterans  not  far  behind 
Mr.  Carney  were  John  Carroll,  an  emploj^ec  of  the  City  of  Newton  for  37  years  ; 
Timothy  Foley,  another  employee  of  the  Metropolitan  Coal  Com[)any,  with  a  service 

5 


of  8(5  years:  Miclmcl  Murray,  cinploycd  by  Filicld,  Richardson  i^  (  oiiii)aiiy  for  88 
years;  and  Solon  .1.  Kicliardson,  in  the  serviee  of  the  City  T>aundiy  Company  for 
30  years. 

To  all  Avhose  length  of  service  exceeded  20  years,  Ihe  Association  gave  a 
bron/c  medal. 

The  same  classes  for  Old  Horses  and  \'eteran  Di-ivers  are  open  this  year;  and 
the  former  class,  as  Avill  be  seen  ])(do\v,  has  l)een  much  extended.  An  additional 
silver  medal  is  offered  in  this  (dass  l)y  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  charitable  home  and 
hospital  for  horses  at  Stow,  Massachusetts  ;  and  other  new  pi-i/es  are  offered  by  the 
Association. 

HOW  THE  PRIZES  ARE  AWARDED 

A  few  words  should  be  said  about  the  rules  according  to  which  the  judging  is 
done,  for  they  differ  from  those  wdiich  govern  the  ordinary  horse  show.  The  prizes 
arc  awarded p n' man' 1 1/  for  good,  bard,  working  condition,  docile  and  gentle  man- 
ners, showdng  that  the  horses  have  been  kindly  treated,  and  for  comfortable  harness- 
ing. If  two  or  more  single  horses  or  teaius  of  horses  arc  on  a  par  in  this  respect, 
then  the  judges  arc  to  award  the  prize  to  the  best  horse  or  the  best  team.  The  onl}^ 
(jualification  of  these  rules  is  that  age  counts  in  favor  of  and  not  against  a  horse. 
Other  things  being  eijual,  the  prize  should  be  awarded  to  the  older  horse  or  team  of 
horses.  The  rules,  moreover,  arc  formed  to  discriminate  against  "green"  horses, 
or  novices.  The  intention  is  that  the  prizes  shall  go  to  houa  fde  Avorking 
horses  that  have  been  such  for  some  period  of  time,  and  the  longer  the  period  the 
better. 

In  many  cases  certain  imperfections,  not  at  all  ai)parent  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing  stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  to  a  particular  horse. 
The  horses  pass  the  reviewing  stand  at  a  w^alk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness 
would  not  be  apparent,  wdiereas  the  judges  would  have  detected  it  Avhen  the  horses 
were  shown  to  them  at  a  trot.  In  one  case  a  very  beautiful  })air  of  gray  horses 
were  rightly  excluded  from  the  prizes,  because  their  collars  were  too  small.  In 
another  case  a  sore  under  the  collar  prevented  a  very  handsome  truck  horse  from 
receiving  a  prize.  In  still  another  case  much  complaint  was  made  because  a  noted 
horse  that  had  received  many  prizes  at  horse  shows  failed  to  win  a  prize  at  the  work 
horse  parade,  but  the  reason  Avas  that  the  horse  had  become  slightly  lame,  a  fact 
which  was  acknowledged  by  the  owner  after  the  parade. 

6 


If  tlioisi'  ])rin('iple.s  14)011  which  the  i)i'izo.s  arc  awarded  Ije  kept  in  mind,  the 
Association  fc(ds  that  there  will  he  very  little  dissatisfaction  with  the  decisions  of 
the  judges.  Tncreasinii'  c-are  has  been  taken  each  year  in  the  selection  of  the  judges, 
and  the  Association  is  confident  that  its  judges  now  form  a  band  of  men  as  com- 
petent and  impartial  as  can  be  secured. 

THE  OBJECT  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

The  object  of  the  Association  is  to  induce  owners  and  drivers  of  work  horses 
to  take  more  pride  in  their  appearance  and  more  interest  in  their  welfare,  and  also 
to  inducer  the  public  generally  to  feel  some  inteiest  in  the  horses  which  they  see  at 
work  daily  in  the  streets.  These  objects,  it  is  believed,  have  been  accomplished 
in  great  measure.  The  good  effects  of  the  parade  have  been  lasting,  for  it  is  the 
testimony  of  veterinary  surgeons,  horse  shoers,  harness  makers  and  various  other 
persons  in  different  parts  of  the  city  that  work  horses  as  a  rule  are  l)etter  groomed 
and  treated,  and  that  harness  is  more  neatly  kept,  than  was  the  case  before  the 
parades. 

That  similar  parades  will  ultimately  be  held  in  every  large  city  in  the  countiy, 
is  the  hope  and  expectation  of  the  Boston  Association.  One  such  has  already 
been  held  in  Kansas  City,  Missouri,  and  another  in  Toronto,  Canada. 

None  but  owners  of  horses,  and  by  no  means  all  of  them,  realize  how  com- 
pletely the  welfare  and  contentment  of  the  horse  depend  upon  the  man  who  drives 
him  and  takes  care  of  him  ;  and  it  is  a  melancholy  fact  that  man}^  perhaps  most, 
drivers  take  little  interest  in  the  horses  under  their  charge.  Even  to  those  ow^ners 
who  have  no  feeling  for  horses  themselves,  this  matter  is  extremely  important 
merely  from  the  money  point  of  view.  The  difference  in  working  power  and  in 
longevity  between  a  horse  well  treated  and  well  driven,  and  one  badly  treated  and 
badly  driven,  is  far  greater  than  would  be  supposed  by  any  one  who  had  not  actual 
knowledge  of  the  facts. 

]\Ian3^  drivers,  however,  have  a  positive  affection  for  their  horses,  and  take 
the  greatest  pride  in  their  good  appearance.  These  are  the  men  to  whom  the  daily 
toil  is  not  only  a  means  of  livelihood,  but  a  source  of  happiness  ;  and  to  re^vard 
and  increase  this  class  is  the  main  object  of  the  Boston  AVork  Horse  Parade 
Association. 

THE  FUTURE  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

As  to  the  future,  although  the  chief  function  of  the  Association  is  to  organize  an 
annual  parade  and  competition,  it  will  consider  itself  at  liberty  to  use  its  funds  for 

7 


the  relief  of  work  lior.-^cs  in  any  proper  and  practicable  niaiinei'.  lOspeeially  does  it 
hope  to  proeurc  better  watering  facilities  in  the  streets,  and  more  humane  jiave- 
ments  ;  to  prevent  the  use  of  horses  that  are  lame  or  otherwise  unfit  for  labor  ;  to 
})ro\ide  or  to  assist  others  in  ])i'o\  iding  a  countiv  home  or  ])l:ice  of  rest,  for  horses 
tempoi-arilj'  disabled  or  exhausted. 

Beside  what  sums  are  obtained  from  the  publication  of  advei'lisements  in  the 
catalogue,  the  Association  has  no  I'cceipts  exce})t  gifts.  The  officers  render  their 
services,  which  in  some  cases  are  arduous,  without  anv  conipensation  ;  and  it  is  con- 
fidently expected  that  those  citizens  of  Boston,  who  love  horses,  and  who  derive 
pleasure  oi'  ^jrofit  from  the  use  of  them,  Avill  contribute  according  to  their  means. 


THIRD  ANNUAL  PARADE,  MAY  30,  1905 


PRIZES 

III"',  mmibe'i'  of  prizes  assigned  to  eaeh  elass  is  stated  in  the  eata- 
looue  at  the  head  of  the  class,  but  this  number  may  l)e  decreased 
if  till  the  entries  in  that  class  do  not  appear,  or  if  the  Judges 
determine  that  all  the  prizes  cannot  worthily  be  l)esto\yed.  The 
prizes  will  be  awarded  in  sets  of  four  prizes,  namelj^  :  First, 
second,  third  and  fourth,  and  with  each  set  there  ji'oes  also  a 
'diigln'  commended,'"  jjurple  ribbon. 

A  ril)b()n  accompanies  each  prize  as  follows  : — Blue  with  the  fii-st ;  Ked  with 
the  second  ;  Yellow  with  the  third  ;  White  with  the  fourth.  The  money  prizes 
will  Ix'  given  to  the  drivers.  Diplomas  for  the  owners  will  be  awarded  with  each 
prize. 

In  addition,  certificates  wdll  be  awarded  to  those  drivers  who  are  entitled  to 
them  as  stated  below.  The  money  prizes  and  ribbons  will  be  given  at  the  review- 
ing stand.  The  diplomas  and  certificates  will  be  delivered  by  mail,  or  otherwise, 
after  the  parade. 

CERTIFICATES 

Certificates  will  be  awarded  to  those  drivers  who  are  certified  by  the  owner  to 
have  driven  the  horses  shown  by  them  in  the  parade  for  at  least  one  year  prior  to  the 
date  of  the  entry,  provided  that  in  the  opinion  of  the  Judges,  the  horses  are  service- 
ably  sound,  and  in  good  flesh,  condition  and  spirits,  showing  that  they  have  been  w^cU 
and  gently  handled.  A  horse  shall  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  he  goes 
sound  and  breathes  sound.     A  l)lind  horse  may  be  serviceably  sound. 


INSTRUCTIONS    TO  JUDGES 

The  Judges  are  earnestly  re(|uested  to  lie  at  their  stations  promptly  at  7.45 
o'clock,  so  that  the  judging  can  begin  as  soon  as  the  horses  arrive.  This  is  essential 
to  the  complete  success  of  the  parade. 


It  is  the  (liitv  ot  the  .Indues  to  oxcliulc  fi-oiii  the  parade  any  horse  that  is  dock- 
taih'd,  or  sick,  lame,  thin,  or  othcrw  isc  unlit  for  work  :  and  also,  unless  the  defect 
is  remedied  on  the  spot,  any  horse  inii)r()perly  harnessed,  or  attached  to  a  vehicle 
bearing  any  temporary  ad\crtisement  or  decoration. 

The  prizes  are  to  l)e  a\\iU(le(l  primarily  for  o-ood,  hard,  working-  condition, 
docile  and  gentle  manners,  showing  that  the  hoi'scs  have  been  kiiidly  treated,  and 
for  comfortable  harnessing.  If  two  or  more  single  horses  or  teams  of  horses  are 
on  a  par  in  this  respect,  then  the  Judges  shall  award  the  prize  to  the  best  horse  or 
best  team. 

In  this  exhil)ition,  age  counts  in  favor  of,  and  not  against,  a  horse.  Other 
things  being  equal,  the  })rize  should  be  awarded  to  the  older  horse  or  team  of  horses. 

Color  is  not  to  be  considered,  even  in  respect  to  matched  teams. 

The  vehicle  is  not  to  be  considered,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  harnessed  to  it,  should  disfjualif}^  the  entiy. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  Avork  required  of  it,  is  to  be 
preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  is  to  be  observed  especially  in  respect  to 
bridk's  and  other  parts,  in  Avhicli  great  strength  is  not  needed. 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  is  not  to  be  considered. 

It  is  expected  that  Judges  will  test  horses  at  a  trot  before  awarding  prizes 
to  them. 

If  any  disi)uted  point  arises,  the  Judges  for  the  class  shall  decide  it,  and  their 
decision  shall  be  final,  except  that  if  the  Judges  so  desire  they  may  require  the 
assistance  of  any  two  members  of  the  Executive  Committee,  who,  with  the  Judges, 
shall  make  the  final  decision. 

The  Judges  will  indicate  on  the  special  catalogue  furnished  to  them  the  num- 
bers of  the  horses  winning  prizes,  and  the  names  of  the  drivers  entitled  to  certifi- 
cates, and  Avill  bring  the  catalogues,  so  marked,  to  the  reviewing-stand,  as  soon  as 
the  judging  is  finished.  They  ai-e  reijuested  not  to  inform  anybody  of  the  result 
of  the  judging,  except  the  person  ai)pointcd  to  receive  their  report  at  the  reviewing 
stand. 


10 


SPECIAL    PRIZES 


OLD  HORSE  CLASS 


DIVISION  A 

Horses  to  be  eligible  to  this  division  must  be  in  iietive  service,  and  must  Inive 
l)een  owned  and  used  by  the  person  making  the  entry  (or  by  his  predecessor  in  the 
business)  for  not  less  than  fifteen  years  prior  to  the  entry. 

In  this  division  the  following  prizes  arc  offered  :  First  Prize,  Gold  Medal  of 
the  value  of  $20.00,  by  the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to 
Animals,  through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq.  ;  Second  Prize,  $10.00  by  the  Animal  Rescue 
League  ;  Third  Prize,  $5.00,  by  the  Association  ;  Fourth  Prize,  $4.00,  by  the  As- 
sociation. In  addition,  the  Association  offers  so  many  "Highly  Commended" 
ribbons,  with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 

These  special  prizes  go  to  the  owner;  but  the  Association  will  also  award 
with  each  special  prize,  a  rosette,  to  be  the  property  of  the  driver. 

DIVISION  B 

This  division  is  open  to  horses  that  are  now  in  active  service,  and  have  been 
owned  and  used  b}'  the  person  making  the  entry,  or  by  his  predecessor  in  the  busi- 
ness, for  not  less  than  ten  years  nor  more  than  fifteen  years  prior  to  the  entry. 

First  Prize,  Silver  Medal  of  the  value  of  $10.00,  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm  ; 
Second  Prize,  $5.00  gold  piece  offered  by  the  Association  ;  Third  Prize,  $3.00  of- 
fered by  the  Association  ;  Fourth  Prize,  $2.00  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 

The  prizes  in  this  class  will  be  awarded  to  the  horses  in  the  best  condition,  age 
and  length  of  service  considered.  Horses  entered  in  this  class  are  not  eligible  for 
any  other  class.     This  class  is  not  open  to  horses  owned  by  cities  or  towns. 

VETERAN  DRIVER  PRIZE 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers,  through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq., 
a  Silver  Medal  of  the  value  of  $10.00,  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  has 
been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  emploj-er,  or  of 
the  predecessor  in  l)usiness  of  that  employer.  In  addition,  the  Association 
wnll  give  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in  this  class,  (the  prize  winner 
excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 

11 


Co}fiplif?ients  of 


I.   GOLDBERG  ALFRED    H.    RATHMAN 


GOLDBERG 

&    RATHMAN 


DEALERS     IN 


Metals    and 
Rubbers 

280',  2gi  ^  20 J  Commercial  St, 
BOSTON,         MASSACHUSETTS 


TELEPHONE  :  RICHMOND     745 

12 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS- J905 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 

NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Length  of 
Service 

Thomas  Haley 

The  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co. 

40 

Tatrick  Callaghan 

Newton  Cemetery  Corp. 

3S 

Timothy  Foley 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

37 

Lewis  F.  Brier 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

32 

Wui.  Qui  nil 

E.  S.  Morse 

32 

Solou  J.  Richardson 

Fred  A.  Cunningham 

3- 

G.  M.  Barton 

Creamer-Wing  Laundry  Co. 

31 

Frank  H.  Spinney 

.. 

30 

Peter  F.  Dolan 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

27 

Thomas  Murray 

" 

25 

John  Coffey 

.. 

23 

Michael  J.  Curran 

John  T.  Scully  &  Bro. 

23 

Phillip  Carey 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

21 

C.  11.  Jones 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

21 

Thomas  J.  Hill 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

20 

Patsy  Coughlin 

Creamer-Wing  Laundry  Co. 

20 

Charles  H.  Bissett 

R.  J.  Elder 

20 

For  the  lists  of  Judges,  for  the  names  of  contributors  and  advertisers,  and  for 
other  matter,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  entry  list. 


i! 


13 


II  if) 

C  O  M  P  L  1  M  E  N  T  S     OK 


Thomas    G.    Plant 
Company 


M  A  N    U    F  A  C  T  U   R   K   R  S 


''Queen    Quality" 


SHOES  for  WOMEN 


BOSTON  ::         MASSACHUSETTS 

14 


THE  PARADE— J  905 


EXHIBIT  OF  BOSTON  FIRE  DEPARTMENT 

(By  the  courtesy  of  Benjamin  W-  Wells,  Fire  Commissioner) 


CLASS  I. -OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  A 

The  Prizes  are  as  follows: — ist,  Gold  Medal,  of  the  value  of  520.00;  2nd  Silver  Medal,  of 
the  value  of  lio.oo  ;  3rd,  I5.00  Gold  Piece  ;  4tli,  I4.00.  In  addition  the  Association  offers  so  many 
"highly  commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes  oi$i.oo  each,  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name. 

Horse's 
Age. 

Length 

of 
Service 

0 

I 

Mrs.  F.  H.  Thocndike 

(A  Mor^'au.  mure  not  entered 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

S.  M.  McGough 

forCompelition.) 

F'rank  Bannou 

Eva 
Dick 

35 
24 

32 
20 

•     2 

C.  Berry  .S;  Co. 

Jack  Cotter 

Ned 

25 

18 

3 

Boston  Elev.  Ry.  Co, 

John  J.  Willis 

Bill 

26 

17 

4 

Boston  Elev.  Ry.  Co. 

Chester  Maddox 

Deer 

25 

I? 

5 

Boston  Elev.  Ry.  Co. 

George  Hatfield 

Ben 

Sargent 

.21 

16 

6 

Carter,  Russell  &  Co. 

Nathaniel  Webb 

Ben 

26 

20 

7 

Wm.  Corbett 

Samuel  S.  Corbett 

Fanny 

23 

17 

8 

Winslow  H.  Dodge 

Tim  Normoile 

Dolly 

35 

17 

9 

Lindley  J.  Foss 

Edward  Bingham 

Kit 

23 

18 

ID 

F.  W.  Homans 

Frank  H.  Foster 

Ned 

21 

16 

II 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

Lewis  Brier 

Romeo 

24 

16 

12 

Peter  H.  McNealy 

George  Hill 

\  Billy 
/  Kate 

;i 

15 
15 

13 

Newton  Cemeter}^  Corp. 

Patrick  Callaghan 

PonyW'te 
Face 

22 

17 

14 

J.  T.  TigheCo. 

Patrick  Ashman 

Polly 

22 

17 

15 

Chas.  H.  Titus 

Samuel  Walton 

Nellie 

23 

15 

16 

W.  P.  Whittemore 

John  Adams 

Nell 

19 

'5 

17 

James  F.  Wier 

Frederick  E.  Wier 

Ned 

31 

20 

!;■) 


V) 


Metropolitan     Coal     Company 

GENERAL    OFFICES 

30  CONGRESS  STREET,  BOSTON 


<\       ANTHRACITE 


Coal 


BITUMINOUS 


FOR  ALL  STEAM  AND  DOMESTIC 

PTJJ^  POSES 


BRANCH  OFFICES  IN  ALL  SECTIONS  OF    THE  CITY  AND   SUBURBS 
TELEPHONE,  MAIN  4640 


£aj/  State  Fuel  Companj 

A  Consolidation  of  the  old  Firm  of 

RICHARDSON  &  BACON  with  BAKKR-H  UNNEWELL  CO. 
GENERAL  OFFICE  and  WHARVES 

157    MAIN   STREET  -  -  CAMBRIDGl 


BRANCH  OFFICES 
In  Cambridge 

J336  Massachusetts  Avenue 
Harvard  Square 

624  Massachusetts  Avenue 
Central  Street 


BRANCH  OFFK 
In  Boston 

J  27  Cambridge  St 


COAL    AND    W^OOD 


IG 


OLD  HORSE  CLASS 

DIVISION  B 

1st  Prize  a  Silver  Medal,  of  the  value  of  jf  lo.oo  ;  2iid  Prize,  a  I5.00  Gold  Piece  ;  3rd  Prize, 
I3.00  ;  4th  Prize,  1^2.00.  In  addition,  the  Association  offers  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  rib- 
bons, vi^ith  prizes  of  #1.00  each,  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

1 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Length 
Service 

18 

Abbott  &  Fernald  Co. 

Frank  Handrahan 

The  Colt 

17 

11 

19 

Boston  Elev.  Ry.  Co. 

Thomas  Davis 

Sally 

21 

14 

20 

" 

E.  J.  Delaney 

Cy  Young 

21 

13 

21 

W.  C.  Bray 

Nathan  Tighe 

Peggy 

19 

13 

22 

Jacob  Bierweiler 

John  Brown 

Kate 

17 

12 

23 

Chick,  White  S:  Co. 

Robert  F.  Fraser 

Ned 

16 

12 

24 

" 

Peter  J.  McAvoy 

Nigger 

17 

13 

25 

Creamer- Wing  Laundry  Co. 

Oakley  P.  Creamer 

Sam  Slick 

.      16 

12 

26 

" 

Louis  D.  Abbott 

Topsy 

17 

13 

27 
30 

McKenney  &  Waterbury  Co. 

'               Asa  H.  West 
Robert  Tidman 

Grey  Mare 

18 

12 

Jim 

17 

13 

31 

John  McNealy 

Owen  J.  McNealy 

j  Dan 
i  Fred 

20 
16 

14 
II 

32 

Perkins  Wood  Working  Co. 

Martin  T.  Magoon 

Kate 

21 

II 

33 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

J.  J.  McDermott 

Nigger 
No.  I 

19 

13 

34 

.         .<         .< 

Edward  Higgins 

Nigger 
No.  2 

18 

12 

35 

"         "         " 

Walter  Lockhart 

(  Tom 

I  Jim 

17 
18 

12 
12 

36 

John  T.  Scully  '&  Bro. 

Cornelius  Gains 

Sam 

22 

14 

37 

Albert  A.  Smith 

Steve  Fallon 

Daisy 

19 

13 

38 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thomas  J.  Hill 

Frank 

17 

12 

39 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Henry  Hubert 

Nelly 

20 

12 

40 

C.  L.  York 

Edward  Elkins          j 

Tom 

16 

12 

41 

" 

Edward  J.  Bryant 

Nigger 

18 

12 

42 

,. 

Fred  W.  Tucker 

jMag 
(Jim 

18 
18 

13 
13 

T.  H.  VOULDEN 


Youlclcn,    Smith   <&    Hopki 

MOVERS  OF 


^xS 


$c 


:,^ 


Safes    and    Machinery 

'J       Teaming:  of  All  Kinds   ^    Rigging  "Work  a  Specialty 


"^ 


OFFICE  STAND 

571  Atlantic  Avenue  48  Sudbury  Sti    vi 


Basement 


TELEPHONES:      135  Main      J  740  Main      H  50  Hay  market 


18 


CLASS  2 —CITIES— Park  Department 

In   this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows  :  oue  First,    one  Second,    one  Third, 
one  Fourth  and  three  Highly  Commended  ribbons. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

43 

City  of  Boston  (Park  Dept.) 

Jas.  O'Neil 

I 

44 

<< 

Edw.  A.  Murphy 

I 

45 

.. 

Wm.  J.  Donely 

I 

46 

" 

Michael  E.  Gorman 

I 

46a 

" 

Thos.  H.  Mulvey 

I 

46b 

" 

Jeremiah  Cronin,  2d 

I 

47 

.. 

Geo.  H.  Vantassel 

2 

48 

" 

Patk.  Dailey 

2 

49 

" 

Patk.  Sheehan 

2 

50 

" 

John  F.  Coakley 

2 

50a 

,< 

Thomas  Cornell 

2 

CLASS  3.— CITIES  AND  TOWNS— Street  Department 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award   prizes  as    follows  : — Two   Firsts,    two   Seconds,    two 
Thirds,  two  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  ribbons. 


51 

City  of  Boston  (St.  Dept.) 

Patrick  Murray 

52 

" 

John  Lynch 

53 

« 

Frank  Cotter 

54 

" 

Jeremiah  Collins 

55 

" 

Dennis  Cronin 

56 

" 

Edward  F.  Simpson 

57 

" 

John  Doherty 

58 

City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept.) 

James  J.  Connors 

59 

" 

Michael  F.  Burke 

60 

Town  of  Brookline  (St.  Dept.) 

Patrick  F.  Russell 

61 

"        " 

James  W.  Summers 

62 

"         " 

Patrick  Gallagher 

63 

" 

James  P.  Lacey 

64 

" 

Thomas  E.  Sullivan 

19 


M.    FRBDIANI    c^    SON 

Wholesale  Dealers  in 
a  n  <  1     SALTED     NUTS 

2200  ^A(^ash.iotytoll  St.,       Roxbtir^^ 

^ V"- 

EUGENE     S.     MORSE 

\SJ  Dealer  in  d 


Ipp    Medfoi'd    Street^    opposite    Rvei^ctt    Street^    BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,   Charlestown    136  CHARLESTOWN    DISTRICT 


D.    WHITING    &    SONS 

WHOr,ESAI,K    AND     RETAIL 

MilK  dwnd   Cream   Dealers 


AND    PROPRIETORS    OF 

Whiting    W    Creamery 
Butter 


\^ 


556       Rutherford     Ave.,     Telephone  Nos.  245  and  246  Chailestown,     BoStOll,     M  ESS. 

20 


CIvASS  3.— CITIES  AND  TOWNS.— Street  Departmeut.— (:"t;;///«//£'^/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

65 

Town  of  Brookliue  (St.  Dept) 

Henry  A.  Lacey 

2 

66 

.,         .< 

John  Dolan 

2 

67 

" 

Thomas  Miskell 

2 

CLASS  4,-HUCKSTERS 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — One  First,  one  vSecond,  one  Third 
one  Fourth. 


6S 

Wm.  G.  Burrows 

Mike  Coakley 

69 

Wm.  G.  Burrows 

Wm.  J.  Burrows 

70 

Albert  Christian  Faul 

Albert  Christian  Faul 

71 

Robert  C.  Huddy 

Arthur  O'Neil 

72 

Mrs.  E.  A.  Janse 

John  A.  Janse 

73 

James  Meredith 

James  Meredith 

CLASS  5 —LAUNDRIES 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  five  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


James  M.  Anderson 


City  Laundry 


Henry  E.  S.  Lightfoot 

Charles  E.  Morey 

Walter  P.  Gardner 

Frank  H.  Ames 

William  W.  Paterson 

Solon  J.  Richardson 

Norman  W.  Sias 

Frank  E.  Murray 

James  O'Brien 

Walter  C.  Wood 

Frank  C.  Walker 


21 


JORDAN  MARSH  CO 


Estaljlislied  1851 


HEADQUARTERS     FOR 


Horse  Clothing,  Whips,   Crops 

CARRIAGE  and  AUTO  ROBES 


Our  Standard  Always  the  Highest  Our  Prices  Absolutely  the  Lowest 

Our  Stock  Always  the  Largest 

GEO.  P.  POTE  ESTABUSHED  IN  1830  H.  S.  RICHARDSON 

J.  L.  BOWLEY  A.  F.  POTE 

FIFIELD,  RICHARDSON  & 
COMPANY 

Truckmen    aiid   For^varders 

BONDED  TEAMS  FOR  CUSTOM  HOUSE  BUSINESS 


OFFICE,  185  Franklin  St.,  Boston,  Room  i 

22 


CLASS  s.—hAVNDKinS—Coit/mued 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


City  Laundry 
Creamer- Wing  Laundry  Co. 


Lillian  M.  Eaton 

Excelsior  Laiiudry  Co. 

Foster,  Currier  Laundry  Co. 


Daniel  J.  Keleher 
G.  W.  Pettengill 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


James  O'Neill 

G.  M.  Barton 

Edward  H.  Fairfield 

Jack  H.  Gingrass 

Patsey  Coughlin 

Frank  H.  Spinney 

Tim  Crouin 

Johnnie  Mcintosh 

Alfred  B.  Hovey 

B.  W.  vSaltmarsh 

Joseph  E.  Studley 

John  Boggs 

Harry  T.  Sherry 

Daniel  J.  Riley 

G.  W.  Pettengill 


No. 

of 

Horses 


CLASS  6.— DELIVERY 

In   this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows: — Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  four  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


lOO 
lOI 

1 02 
103 
104 
105 
106 
107 
108 
109 
no 


C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 


Jordan  Marsh  Co. 


James  H.  Padden 

William  E.  Denvir 

George  C.  Lienhard 

William  H.  Hogan 

John  J.  Dwyer 

Albert  Daley 

Augustus  P.  York 

John  A.  Coyne 

John  J.  Ryan 

Frank  S.  Wells 

James  H.  Bates 


23 


DELIVERY  TEAM 


MILK 


H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 


Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 


MILK,    CREAM 
and     BUTTER 


494  Rutherford  Avenue,  -    Charlestown 
193  Alley  St.,  Lynn 


COMPLIMENTS     OF 

oBcorgc  I).   Caliili 

ALLvSTON  &  BRIGHTON 
EX      P      R      E      vS      S 

COMPLIMENTS     OF 

H.B.  Copley  Company 

UPHAM'S    CORNER 
DORCHESTER 

WILLIAM       GILLIGAN 
d^eneral   Contractor 

Dealer    in    SAND     AND     GRAVEL 


TEAMING     AND     EXCA FATING 


Telephone,  209  Roxbury 


Office,    28    Mechanic   Street 


24 


CIvASS  6.— DELIVERY—  Continued 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

III 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

John  Murray 

112 

" 

Daniel  Moylau 

113 

" 

James  Coyle 

— 

114 

McKenney  &  Waterbury  Co. 

Wni.  E.  vSalmon. 

114a 

\Vm.  Tyuer  &  Sous 

Andrew  M.  Tyuer 

I 

115 

Wax  Bros. 

John  W.  East 

116 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thos.  Concaugh 

117 

" 

John  Mutrie 

118 

" 

Thos.  Barrett 

119 

«     .. 

John  Adams 

120 

.. 

John  Regan 

121 

" 

Arthur  Austin 

122 

" 

Fulton  Ainslee 

123 

"           "           " 

Daniel  J.  Donohue 

CLASS  7.— DELIVERY- Newspapers 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows:  —  One  First,  one  vSecond,  one  Third,  one 
Fourth,  and  two  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


124 

Boston  Globe 

Frank  Rcardon 

125 

« 

Timothy  J.  O'Connor 

126 

" 

John  Daley 

127 

" 

James  O'Connor 

128 

" 

Cornelius  Curten 

129 

" 

Michael  J.  Shea 

130 

Boston  Herald 

John  Ahearn 

131 

" 

William  Laurie 

132 

" 

Dennis  Ryan 

133 

" 

Henry  Jones 

2 

25 


J.  G.  WALKER    &    SON,    Cor?p 


CHICAGO  and  NEW  YORK 


Dressed    Beef 


36  North  Street 


Boston,  Mass. 


COMPLIMENTS                 ^ 

OP      -^y- 

THE  WORK  HORSE 

FELLS  ICE  CO. 

THOMAS   NA/.    BERRY 


Machinery  Mover,  Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 

MACHINERY    BOXED,   CRATED   AND    SHIPPED 
SAFES  HOISTED  AT  A  VERY  REASONABLE  RATE 


189     Lincoln     St. 


Boston,     Mass. 


26 


CLASS  8.  — EXPRESS 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows: — Three   Firsts,  three   Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  four  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


No. 

of 

Entry 


136 
137 
138 
139 
140 
141 
142 

143 

144 

145 
146 

147 
14S 
149 
150 

152 
153 
154 
155 
156 

158 

160 
161 


OWNER'S  NAME 


Jacob  Bierweiler 
Bostou  SuVjurban  Ex.  &  Parcel  Co. 


Boston  Suburban  Ex 


&  Parcel  Co. 


Carter,  Russell  &  Co. 


John  J.  Conroy 

Winslow  H.  Dodge 
W.  B.  Howard 

Howe  &  Co. 
Munroe  &  Arnold 


North  Shore  Express  Co. 

F.  H.  Parker  &  Sou 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

M.  J.  Shuckrowe 

Hanson  S.  Thwaites 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

J.  A.  Cremo 

M.  J.  Dunn 

Henry  P.  Rowe 

J.  F.  Mills 

Frank  A.  Ryan 

John  Hayes 

Phillip  E.  Dollaher 

Willis  Dustin 

Charles  Murphy 

George  L,.  Callaghan 

George  W.  Horton 

Alexander  Dick 

John  J.  Conroy 

John  J.  Donahue 

Charles  Tufts 
Frank  McManus 
Charles  E.  Eaton 
Richard  J.  Elliott 
John  J.  Blakeley 
Henry  Boudreaux 
Freeman  J.  Wagner 
Henry  Gray 
Wm.  H.  Madigan 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

M.  J.  Shuckrowe 

James  A.  Fitzgerald 

George  W^.  Crawford 


27 


[9KENNlY&M^ERBUKy(bMPANY.    f 


s^v^S^ 


John  L  Scully  &  Brother 


CONTRACTORS  i^ 


TEflnSTERS 


m 


FILE   DRIVERS 


Boston 


Cambridge 


USE ■  •  ' 

BENDORPS 

ROYAL    DUTCH 

COCOA 

FOR 

DRINKING    AND    COOKING 


J.  S.  HIIvLIARD  &  SON 


ESTABLISHED     1261 


^:v 


Tru  c  km  en 

and 


X 


^  N^-  Fo  r\A/  a  rd  e  r  s 

29    India    Street  :  BOSTON 


28 


CLASS*  9  — MILK  DEALERS 

In   this  Class   the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows:  —  Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  four  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

162 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

John  E.  Walsh 

I 

163 

" 

0.  R.  Andrews 

I 

164 

.. 

Chester  A.  Greenlaw 

I 

165 

u 

B.  A.  Chute 

I 

166 

" 

A.J.  Bradeeu 

I 

167 

- 

Charles  E.  Barker 

I 

168 

<< 

Thomas  Dwyer 

I 

169 

" 

Henry  Meyers 

I 

170 

" 

I.  N.  Perry 

2 

171 

« 

S.  E.  Sanford 

2 

172 

George  H.  Noone 

Harmon  T.  Noone 

I 

173 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Assn. 

George  Blackett 

I 

174 

" 

A.  S.  Peabody 

I 

175 

" 

Oral  Bradford 

I 

176 

" 

F.  B.  Humphrey 

I 

177 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

William  Greaves 

I 

178 

.    " 

Edward  H.  Everton 

I 

179 

« 

Stephen  C.  Meek 

I 

180 

« 

Joseph  A.  Carder 

I 

181 

<< 

Gus  Cardinal 

I 

182 

" 

Peter  J.  McDonald 

2 

183 

" 

John  E.  Ellard 

2 

,84 

" 

Clayton  E.  Everton 

2 

185 

Frank  Maguire 

2 

29 


^xV) 


JOHN  M.  WOODS  CHARLES  H.  SHERBURNE  E.  D.  WALKER  W.  E.  CHAMBERLAIN 

JOHN  M.  WOODS  &  CO. 


WHOLESALE 


^^#' 


Hardwood  Lumber  ^ 


E  T  A  I  L 


AIR    DRIED    AND    KILN    DRIED 

Specialties  : 

MAHOGANY      ::      WHITEWOOD      ::      QR.  SYCAMORE       ::     CHERRY 

OAK      ::      ASH      ::      WALNUT 


223  to  239  Bridge  Street,         East  Cambridge,  Mass, 

TELEPHONE,  CAMBRIDGE  J430 


BIGGI  &  LEVERONE 

Compliments 
of 

MANUIACTIRKRS       AND       DEALERS       IN 

Confectionery 
and  Ice  Cream 

M.  A.  STEWART 

MmX^  m\h  ($x\Mn\tB 

Wholesale  Department,  36  No.  Bennet  St. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

Green  and  Bunker  Hill  Sts. 

RETAIL  STORE,  222  HANOVER  ST. 

CHARLESTOWN 

MILL  OFFICE, 

Telephone  483  Roxbwry 

ELEVATOR  and  MILL, 

200  Norfolk  Avenue 

EDWIN    D.    DODGE 

The    Dudley    Feed    Mills 

Flour,  Grain,  Hay  and  Feed 

CONTENTS     OF    VAULTS     AND     CESSPOOLS 


ROXBURY    DISTRICT 


BOSTON,    MASS, 


30 


CLASS  10 —EGGS,  PROVISIONS  AND  FISH 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


No. 

of 

Entry 


187 
188 
189 
190 
191 
192 

194 

196 
197 
198 
199 
200 
201 
202 
203 
204 
205 
206 
207 
208 
209 
210 
211 


OWNER'S  NAME 


Frederick  C.  Allnutt 

Martin  J.  Coughlin 

Geo.  W.  Epps 

J.  F.  Heald 
J.  F.  Heald 

Wymau  Libby 
Isaac  Locke  &  Co. 

Miller  &  Portfer 

J.  S.  Newcomb  &  Co. 

Prescott  &  Ouiun 

C.  H.  Porter 


Geo  F.  Richardson 


Alfred  Sears  &  Co. 


Shattuck  &  Jones 


Albert  A.  Smith 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


William  E.  Frances 
Martin  J.  Coughlin 
Frederick  H.  Epps 

Geo.  W.  Epps 
Thomas  P.  Carroll 

John  H.  Logan 

Patrick  J.  Rutledge 

Clarence  W.  Libby 

S.  F.  Currier 

Frank  Marston 

Ernest  Lawson  Miller 

Charles  O.  Cheney 

Matthew  Sheridan 

J.  R.  Emery 
William  A.  Burkett 

Perle  E.  Rawson 
Richard  J.  Huggard 

Thomas  Miller 

William  H.  Sears 

William  Snow 

Morris  Currier 

G.  Fred  Seamon 

John  Bradshaw 

Leonard  J.  Bartel 

Joe  Heinlein 


31 


^^.\.^ 


^w 


Used    Round    the    World 

Wailei  Baker  SCo:s 

fi  Chocolate 


AND 


Cocoa 

The  leader  fcr 
124  Years 


T KAi,  MAKK^       5World's FafT 
GrandPrize|g^    Louis 

Walter  Baker  &  Co.  Ltd. 

Established  17S0       Dorchester,  Mass. 


^K     HIGHEST    AWARDS     IN 
f**£    EUROPE  AND  AMERICA 


Blinn,   Morrill 
&   Company 


Truckmen 


Nos*  6  Chatham  Row 


and 


H3  Franklin  Street 

BOSTON 


J.    Oi^ACKARD    &    SONS 

/^   Dea 


High-  Class  vSaddle  and 
Harness  Horses,  carefully 
selected,  thoroughly  ac- 
climated, perfectly  man- 
nered, and  ready  for 
immediate  city  use  :    :    :   : 


Telephone,  226  HAYMARKET 


ealers  in  First  Quality 
^^  CARRIAGE  HORSES 

EXCLUSIVELY 


7^4  Chardon  Street 

BOSTON 

a  2 


Brighton  Avenue 

ALLSTON 


CLASS  U.— BAKERS  AND  CONFECTIONERS 

la  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows: — Three   I'irsts,  three  Seconds    three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

212 

C.  H.  Bent  &  Co. 

Billy  Greggs 

213 

Biggi  &  Leverone 

Kdward  H.  Macdonald 

214 

J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Ferguson 

Thomas  Hunt 

215 

Fred  O.  Evans 

216 

George  G.  Fox  Co.    \ 

W.  J.  Ralston 

217 

,     „ 

Nicholas  M.  Fox 

218 

" 

H.  T.  Stanley 

219 
220 

,, 

-r-    Walter  Woodberry 
f\/S^         I-  Bishop 

221 

" 

(     r\ 

i^KO)))^°^^•'^^t^°''^ 

222 

" 

.    ..     \  0 

Francis  J.  Gallant 

223 

^ 

'     "      \ 

Joseph  P.  Brannen 

224 

" 

J 

W.  Frank  Crowley 

2 

225 

•' 

'    "  _/ 

William  H.  Vaughan 

2 

226 

M.  Frediaui 

Ulysess  Frediaui 

2 

227 

A.  A.  Knights  &  Sou,  Corp. 

Perry  E.  Shupe 

228 

The  Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

John  F.  Mullen,  Jr. 

229 

" 

John  Bushee 

230 

Isaac  Withrow 

231 

" 

George  W.  Reid 

232 

W.  H.  McCarthy 

Wm.  H.  McCarthy 

CLASS  12.— GROCERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Five  Firsts,  five  Seconds,  five  Thirds, 
five  Fourths,  and  fi.ve  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


233 

American  Grocery  Co. 

Harry  Oransky 

2 

234 

Eldridge,  Baker  &  Co. 

John  S.  McAdanis 

2 

235 

George  O.  Emerson  Co. 

Daniel  Duggan 

2 

38 


)pv/jsfEy5 


COCOA  AND  chocolate: 

SUPERFINE    FULL    RICH    FLAVOR 
ABSOLUTELY   PURE  AND  WHOLESOME 

The  Walter  M.  Lowney   Company 

447   COMMERCIAL   STREET,      •      BOSTON,    MASS. 


C.  F.  HOVEY   &  CO. 


IMPORTERS     AND     RETAILERS     OF 

DRY   GOODS 

Sole  Agents  for  Boston  for  the  Celebrated 

Alexandre  Kid   Gloves 

MEDALS    AWARDED    THE    MANUFAC- 
TURERS   AT    EVERY    WORLD'S    FAIR 


v« 


33  Summer  Street 


42  Avon  Street,  Boston 


34 


CLASS  i2.—GKOCnRS.—Co/i/iiutec/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

236 

M.  O'Keeffe 

Stephen  Maddern 

2 

237 

.. 

Thomas  J.  Galvin 

2 

238 

" 

Patrick  Carey 

2 

239 

" 

John  J.  Bowen 

2 

240 

" 

Patrick  McNamara 

2 

241 

.. 

Thomas  McCarthy 

2 

242 

" 

Michael  Frost 

^ 

243 

" 

Florence  Sullivan 

. 

244 

,< 

Timothy  Sullivan 

3 

245 

" 

Michael  Quinu 

3 

246 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

James  McLean 

I 

247 

:  :  :  i 

Robert  Royce 

I 

248 

Charles  Furlong 

I 

249 

Clarence  H.  Jones 

2 

250 

'l/,^^"^      Walter  Lockhart 

2 

251 

:;  :  :/V^ 

IT)               John  Hartford 

2 

252 

Clarence  Eldridge 
j;V  .v^-     Charles  W.  Smith 

4 

253 

" ,',.  -^ 

4 

254 

<'    ..  -j" 

Patrick  Donahue 

4 

255 

/ 

C.  R.  Woodman 

6 

256 

M.  A.  Stewart 

George  E,  Magoun 

I 

257 

J;  C.  Talbot 

Joe  Rowell 

I 

258 

" 

Fred  Preston 

I 

259 

" 

Frank  Leversack 

I 

260 

" 

Herbert  A.  Moulton 

I 

261 

" 

Henry  Tucker 

I 

262 

George  Tucker 

2 

263 

J.  C.  Thornton  &  Co. 

John  C.  Thornton 

I 

264 

" 

Maynard  D.  Hazen 

r 

265 

" 

James  Holland 

2 

266 

Tiniberlake  &  Small 

Frank  Leslie 

I 

ESXA.BL.ISME:D     1S-70 


W .    P  .    W  H I T  T  E  M  ORE 

WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALER  IN 

X         1b a ^  ant>  (3rain 


c-rr^DAz-ir       (  100,000  bushels  Grain  |     CAPACITY 
STORAGE      ,,000  tons  Hay  )     CAPACUY 


BRANCH  STORES 
3371  Washington  St.,  Jamaica  Plain,  Tel.  422-2  J.  P. 

1232  Dorchester  Avenue,  Dorchester.     Tel.  88-4  Dor. 

MAIN  OFFICE  : 

Mills,  Elevator  and  Hay  Sheds  at  Mt.  Hope  Station,  Roslindale  P.  O.,  Mass. 

Telephone,  422-3    J.  P. 


ecntplimems  of  a  friend 


R.  A.  KENNETT 


V  "\ 


H 


trucKman  and  forwarder 


V) 


5  North  Market  St.      -       Boston 

Telephone,  78  Richmond 


Compliments  of= 


McCall 


®J|^  l|ant^BS  Mm\ 


353    Rutherford   Avenue 


Charlestown 


36 


CLASS  12.— GROCERS— a^;///;//^r(/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 
Horses 

267 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Chester  B.  Eames 

I 

268 

" 

Frank  J.  Jordan 

2 

269 

Warreu  F.  WitheriU  Co 

Daniel  Gallivan 

I 

269a 

"         •'             "         " 

Benjamin  Jones 

I 

269b 

" 

John  H.  Lee 

I 

CLASS  13.— BOTTLERS 

In    this   Class   the  Judges   may   award    prizes   as    follows  : — Two  Firsts,  two  Seconds,  two 
Thirds,  two  Fourths,  and  two  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


270 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

Wm.  Borns 

271 

" 

John  Murphy 

272 

Michael  Doherty  &  Co. 

Thomas  H.  Gorman 

273 

Chas.  L.  Gove  &  Co. 

James  A.  McNulty 

274 
275 

::  ::  :;/^ 

Albert  S.  Winch 
James  J.  Coughlin 

276 

W.  J.  Higgins 

Joseph  Bird 

277 

Moxie  Nerve  Food  Co. 

William  Lakin 

278 

" 

James  H.  Gordon 

279 

" 

Ira  Adams 

280 

<<            It            (1 

Ernest  L.  Parker 

281 

"    -        " 

A.  N.  Nicholson 

282 

<. 

James  E.  Mitchell 

283 

Iv.  Speidel  &  Co. 

John  A. Johnson 

284 

" 

Charles  L.  Breton 

285 

"              " 

Herman  L.  Stenzel 

37 


-'"ii 


If  Our  Ror$e$  Please  Vou,  Cry  Our  Caundry  Hlork 


Collections  made  in 

ROSLINDALE.  DORCHESTER, 
SOUTH  BOSTON,  BROOKLINE, 
BACK  BAY  AND  CITY   i.  *  *  « 


Telephone,  283  Roxburj 


C.  N.  CUNNINGHAM,  Proprietor 

96,  98,  100  Lenox  St. 


A.  H.  Richardson,  Jr.     D.  S.  Woodberr^ 


Humb^r 


Rooms  412-413  Wentworth  Building 
Opposite  South  Union  Station 


170  Summer  St. 


©rurktttan 


ii 


Boston    I    310  Atlantic  Avenue 


Boston 


T.  J.  PRIEST 


Telephone,  Roxbury  325 


M.  A.  NEVINS 


T.  J.    PRIEST    &   CO 


BOA    DING 
BA     TING 


i^LclDlC   ^^^  s ^ L 


FIRST    CLASS    HORSE    CLIPPING    DONE    BT   ELECTRICITY 

Shoeing  Forge,  Reed  Street 

Nos.  70-72-74  Northampton  St.        -        Boston,  Mass, 

38 


CLASS  H,— FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS. 

Ill  this  Class  the  Judges   may  award    prizes  as   follows :— Two   Firsts,    two   Seconds,    two 
Thirds,  two  Fourths,  and  two  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

286 

Berry  &  Tibbetts 

Geo.  Flanigan 

2 

287 

« 

Albert  Armstrong 

2 

288 

., 

John  Waters 

3 

289 

" 

Chas.  George 

4 

290 

0.  H.  Cahill 

Everett  E.  Dickie 

2 

29T 

A.  H.  Davenport  Co. 

James  A.  McGrath 

292 

« 

Peter  F.  Molloy 

293 

" 

Augustus  h.  Cross 

294 

"    ,       " 

George  A.  Goodwin 

295 

Eldridge  &  Peabody 

A.  McKenna 

296 

James  Z.  Kane 

James  Z.  Kane 

297 

James  F.  LanTders 

J.  F.  Landers 

298 

Michael  D.  Moriarty 

Michael  D.  Moriarty 

299 

The  Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co. 

William  A.  Cutting 

300 

« 

Richard  C.  L.  Peterson 

30  r 

" 

George  W.  Murray 

302 

"   .      " 

William  H.  Mathews 

2 

CLASS  15.-MANUFACTURERS— Singles 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  ma}-  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Three  F'irsts,  three  Seconds,   three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  aud  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


303 

Atwood  &  McManus 

304 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co 

305 

A 

C.  &  M.  h.  Felkin 

306 

J.  B.  Gearin 

307 

Ginn  &  Co. 

308 

"         " 

309 

Green  &  Haley 

310 

R.  C.  GuptiU 

John  Luzzato 

Philip  Carey 

William  Galloway 

Jerome  B.  Gearin 

Arthur  Dumbrack 

Kenneth  McCharles 

W.  J.  McDonald 

Wni.  A.  McCuish 


39 


DAVID  AUBFiS  er  CO. 

500     WASHINGTON     STREET 
BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,  Oxford   2051-3 

TELEPHONE,  DORCHESTER  796-1 

Dorchester   Ice   Company 

Dorchester 

UPHAM'S  CORNER  STABLE  COMPANY 

Hack,  Boarding  and  Livery  Stable 


^        Hacks    for    all     Occasions        J^ 

T6T  DUDLEY  STREET,  DORCHESTER,  MASSACHUSETTS 

Telephone,  348-2  Dorchester  N.  ETHIER,  Manager 

40 


CLASS  15.— MANUFACTURERS— Singles— CV;;//'/;//^^^/ 


No. 

of 

Entry 


311 

312 

312a 

313 

314 

3"5 

316 

317 
318 
319 
320 
321 
322 
323 
324 


OWNER'S  NAME 


II.  J.  Heinz  Co. 
A.  E.  Keuney  &  Co. 

Kenrick  Bros. 
Maiden  Electric  Co. 


Perkins  Wcod  Working  Co 

Fred  S.  Pitman 

T.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Union  Glass  Co. 

Warren  Bros.  Co. 

J.  F.  Willett  &  Co. 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


William  McGiuuess 

Charles  F.  Miller 

D.  Cavanaugh 

J.  W.  Silliker 

John  Silliker 

Geo.  D.  Silliker 

Cornelius  A.  Grimau 

Patrick  Farrar 

Patrick  Grogan 

Edward  Brooks 

Fred  S.  Pitman 

John  H.  Galvin 

John  J.  Brady 

Benjamin  Polack 

John  J.  Sullivan 


CLASS  16,— MANUFACTURERS— Doubles  and  Upward 

In   this  Class   the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows: —  Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


1     ^2.S 
352 

353 

354 

354a 

354b 

354c 

354d 

354e 

354f 

355 

356 


Atwnnd   Sj  MpMnnnc 

1                      Tnmps  V.  MrUeod 

1       2 

Stephen  H.  Duffy 

" 

Joseph  Heffernan 

W.  M.  Robinson 

M.  H.  Howies 

Nathan  Tufts  &  Sons 

Peter  Collins 

"       "      " 

Alfred  Craig 

"       "      " 

Cornelius  Crowley 

.<       ..      .< 

John  Shea 

"       "      " 

John  McCarty 

Tom  Keefe 

John  J.  White 

David  Cowhig 
Patrick  Sheehy 

43 


REMOVAL  of  CHARLES  VAN  BUSKIRK 

THE    WAGON     MAN  './(^/j)^ 

From  former  location  No-  334  Main  Street,  Cambridge,  to  a 
new  and  modern  factory  with  15,000  square  feet  floor  space,  all 
improved  machinery  and  tools  which  place  me  at  the  head  of 
the  list  as  far  as  facilities  go.  Heavy  and  light  wagons, 
caravans  and  sleds  all  manufactured  to  order  promptly. 

Repairing  in  all  its  branches  a  life-long  specialty.      Call 
in  person  or  by  telephone  No.  1562-2  Cambridge. 


CHARLES  VAN  BUSKIRK,  141  First  St.,  E.  Cambridge,  Mass. 


...Compliments  of... 

NATHAN  TUFTS  &  SONS 

CHARLESTOWN 


UPHAM'S  CORNER  STABLE  COMPANY 

Hack,  Boarding  and  Livery  Stable 


-*        Hacks    for    all     Occasions        J* 

T6T  DUDLEY  STREET,  DORCHESTER,  MASSACHUSETTS 

Telephone,  348-2  Dorchester  N.  ETHIER,  Manage 

40 


CLASS  16.— MANUFACTURERS— Doubles  aud  Upward— row/'/w//,?^/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

337 

H.  J.  Heinz  Co. 

Bartholomew  John  Nagle 

2 

338 

" 

Joseph  Francis  DeCota 

2 

339 

J.  Frank  Heme 

Arthur  W.  Heme 

2 

340 

" 

Hiram  B.  Heme 

2 

j.  341 

William  C.  Norcross  Co. 

Roger  Ryan 

3 

'  342 

T.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Cabot  Brewster 

2 

343 

" 

Jno.  T.  Murray 

2 

344 

"           "         " 

Jno.  J.  Griffin 

4 

CLASS  I7.-HAY  AND  GRAIN 

In   this   Class  the  Judges    may  award  prizes  as  follows  :— Four  Firsts,  four  Seconds,  four 
Thirds,  four  Fourths,  and  four  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


345 

Frederic  M.  Bond 

Samuel  Stewart 

346 

E.  D.  Dodge 

Elmer  Keith 

347 

,< 

Duncan  Cusick 

348 

" 

Fred  Leonard 

349 

Hobart  S.  Palmer 

William  S.  Robinson 

350 

« 

Henry  A.  Pero 

351 

A.  H.  Proctor  &  Co. 

Daniel  Downey 

352 

<< 

Stephen  H.  Duffy 

353 

"      ■       ' 

Joseph  Heffernan 

354 

W.  M.  Robinson 

M.  H.  Mowles 

354a 

Nathan  Tufts  &  Sons 

Peter  Collins 

354b 

"       "      " 

Alfred  Craig 

354c 

"       "      " 

Cornelius  Crowley 

354d 

"       "      " 

John  Shea 

354e 

"       "      " 

John  IMcCarty 

354f 

"             "       "      " 

Tom  Keefe 

355 

John  J.  White 

David  Cowhig 

356 

Patrick  Sheehy 

43 


THIS  IS  NOT  COFFEE 


BUT  IS 


— =^^^^a 

^1 

°  1 

■  iimdes. 
"invBlides 

X^^fXi 

M 

j^^m 

Better  than  Coffee 
Richer  than  Coffee 
Nine-tenths  Coffee 


C  •  H  •  BUCK  •  &  •  CO 


faint^ra  ^  i^rnrators  ^  ^tgn  liak^ra 


BOOK,  JOB        Prinf-^rc 

AND    POSTER      1    1  111  LCI  O 


BRASS    AND    ENAMELED    IRON    SIGNS 
FOR  WAGONS 


299  Washington  Street, 


Boston,  Mass. 


44 


CLASS   17.— HAY  AND  GRMN—Co/i/i/ii/c^d 


Prize 

NO. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

357 

John  J.  White 

James  Noonati 

2 

358 

W.  P.  Whittemore 

Martin  Ryan 

I 

359 

Patrick  Donlon 

I 

360 

" 

Barnard  Fay 

I 

361 

John  Devine 

2 

362 

■  ■ 

Edward  Doyle 

2 

363 

,. 

Richard  McDonald 

2 

364 

.. 

William  Graham 

2 

365 

.. 

Horace  W.  Moody 

2 

366 

.. 

Edward  Conroy 

3 

367 

" 

Patrick  Cleary 

4 

CLASS  18.— LUMBER 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows:  —One  First,  one  Second,  one  Third,  one 
Fourth,  and  two  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


N6S 

William  Cohen 

Wm.  Cohen 

2 

369 

Wm.  Curtis'  Sons  Co. 

Peter  Gately 

I 

370 

John  J.  Dwyer 

2 

371 

Dennis  H.  Cashman 

2 

372 

The  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co. 

Thomas  Haley 

2 

373 

J.  0.  Wetherbee  &  Co. 

James  J.  Porter 

2 

374 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 

Joseph  J.  Keough 

I 

375 

" 

Patrick  J.  Donovan 

2 

376 

.. 

Arthur  H.  Stewart 

2 

377 

" 

Myron  R.  Merrifield 

2 

45 


GEORGE  Y.  BERRY 


JUSTIN  M.  TIBBETTS 


BERRY  e.  TIBBETTS 

Formerly  with  Boston  Storage  Warehouse  Company 

Back  :!Ba^  lErprees  Company 

FURNITURE  AND  PIANO  MOVING 


Household   Goods  Carefully  Packed  and  Forwarded 


Mail  orders  will  receive 

.     .     .     Prompt  Attention 


TELEPHONE.         Residence     .     .     . 
396  BACK  BAY  i6  Bullard  St.,  Dorchester 

Tel.  25-4  Dor. 

Office,  23 1  Massachusetts  Ave.         Stand,  Cor.  Massachusetts  Ave.  &  Astor  St. 

Northwest  corner  of  Boston  Storage  Warehouse 


LONDON 
HARNESS 
COMPANY 

J.  H.  Richardson 

COSMOPOLITAN     BOARDING 

John    Hancock    Building 

Devonshire  and   Federal  Streets 

AND    BAITING    STABLE 

Corner    Pitts  and  South  Margin  Streets 
Boston,  Mass. 

Stock*Farm,  ANDOVER,  MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 


Columbia 
S^oati  ^tables 

HARRY    E.    UPRIGHT 


46 


CLASS  J  9.— ICE 


III  this  Class  tht  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Two  Firsts,  two  Seconds,  two  Thirds, 
two  Fourths,  and  two  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


Prize 

No. 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

378 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 

John  D.  Mclutyre 

2 

379 

.<     .. 

Zebina  A.  Hill 

2 

380 

"     « 

Edward  W.  Fitzgerald 

2 

381 

"     " 

Archibald  Mclntyre 

2 

382 

"     " 

Ira  Stedman 

2 

383 

Fells  Ice  Co. 

Wm.  Moody 

2 

384 

•'      "• 

Eldwin  Hilton 

2 

385 

Guilford  D.  Saunders 

2 

386 

Union  Ice  Co. 

James  R.  Muise 

2 

387 

..       .. 

Wm.  F.  Morrell 

2 

388 

<>       <. 

M.  H.  White 

2 

389 

<.         ..       ■< 

Frank  Turner 

2 

390 

..       .. 

J.  B.  Griggs 

2 

391 

..                M 

Fred  Broderick 

2 

392 

"                " 

Joseph  S.  Molansoii 

2 

CLASS  20,— COAL 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may   award   prizes  as   follows: — Four   Firsts,   four  Seconds,    four 
Thirds,  four  Fourths,  aud  four  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


393 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Patrick  Carney 

394 

"         "         "       " 

Patrick  Bannou 

395 

'       '• 

Robert  Lynch 

396 

James  Quigley 

397 

Paul  G.  Cobleuzer 

James  C.  Driver 

398 

"     " 

Joe  Good 

399 

.,     ., 

John  Doherty 

400 

"     " 

John  Sullivan 

401 

"     " 

Charles  Lawson 

47 


ESTABLISHED     1  SSO 

Shattuck     &    Jones 

J^is/i  of  J^ll  J^i'ncls 


OrSTERS,     GliEE.y    TURTLE 
TERJlJiPIJ^    JiMB    SOFT  CRMBS 

Telephone     [  J;}-]^  j    Richmoud  EDWARD   B.    NEWTON 

No.   128  Faneuil  Hall  Market     .'.      .*.      /.      Boston 


^nmnn^  Mnvktt 

J  I     B  RO  M  FIELD     STREET 

ESTABLISHED   1844    .-.     Telephone   No.    1240   Main 


All  Our  Goods  are  Made  of  Distilled  Water 

The  Pureoxia  Company 

Makers    of  ^       \ 

Distilled  Water,  Artificial  Mineral 
Waters,  Ginger  Ale,  High  Class 
Flavored  Beverages,  Water  DiS' 
tilling  Apparatus    .'.     . '. 

Whipple   Street  .-.  .-.  .-.  .-.  Back  Bay,  Boston 

48 


CLASS  20.-^0^1,.— Continued 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

402 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Jerry  O'Neil 

I 

403 

..       ,, 

Charles  D.   Houseman 

I 

404 

"       " 

James  A.  States 

2 

405 

.. 

Patrick  J.  Griffin 

2 

406 

"       " 

John  Boyle 

2 

407 

"       " 

Michael  Beecher 

2 

408 

"       " 

Michael  J.  Griffin 

2 

409 

"       " 

Edward  Crosby 

3 

410 

"       " 

William  Timbers 

3 

411 

"       " 

Daniel  Shea 

3 

412 

John  Morrison  Co. 

John  Wilson 

3 

413 

E 

S.  Morse 

Wm.  Ouinn 

414 

' 

"       " 

John  J.  Vaughn 

415 

' 

" 

Thomas  J.  Brennan 

416 

' 

"       " 

Christopher  H.  vSeaver 

417 

' 

" 

John  J.  Kenney 

418 

' 

.<       ., 

John  McNamara 

419 

' 

"       " 

James  Noonan 

420 

' 

"       «' 

James  J.  Sweeney 

2 

421 

' 

"       " 

Cornelius  Crowley 

3 

422 

' 

..       .< 

John  Doherty 

3 

422a 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Michael  Donovan 

I 

422b 

Patrick  Crowley 

I 

422c 

"  "         "       " 

John  Santry 

2 

422d 

" 

Michael  Santry 

3 

49 


0 


''\  PROCTOR 
BROTHERS 


CRAIGIES  BRIDGE 
EAST  CAMBRIDGE 

Established  1867 


WHOLES^Ivt:    AIMD     RETAIL 

Hay,   Grain 
Straw,  Etc, 


G.  O.  PROCTOR, 


PROPRIETOR 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.  D.  CRESSY 


G,  B.  HOWARD  &  CO. 

Teamsters    and    Forwarders 


CLINTON  MARKET 


BOSTON,  MASS, 


BRANCH   STORE 

Associates' Building 
MILTON 


ESTABLISHED   1815 


J.  C.  TALBOT 

Staple  and  Fancy 
GROCERIES 


1 157  Washington  St.,  Dorchester 


50 


CLASS  21.— JUNK  DEALERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  prizes  as  they  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

423 

Covich  &  Daniel 

Max  Saxe 

I 

424 

Goldberg  &  Rathman 

Harry  Schuchtz 

2 

425 

" 

Samuel  J.   Lebovitz 

3 

426 

J.  Greeuleaf 

J.  Greenleaf 

' 

CLASS  22 -CONTRACTORS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  : — Three  Firsts,  three  Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


427 

John  T.  Connors 

Martin  O'Brien 

2 

428 

«       .. 

Michael  Rock 

2 

429 

"       " 

Patrick  Gatley 

2 

430 

William  Gilligan 

Charles  Wagner 

2 

431 

.< 

Thomas  Kennedy 

2 

432 

■' 

Thomas  McCarty 

2 

433 

" 

E.  Norris 

2 

434 

" 

Steve  Conroy 

2 

435 

., 

John  Holton 

2 

436 

William  McKenna 

2 

437 

" 

John  Kearns 

2 

438 

..- 

William  Crowley 

2 

439 

John   May 

2 

440 

John  Kelly  Jr. 

Thomas  Kelly 

I 

441 

" 

Wm.  Hubner 

2 

442 

.. 

James  Kelly 

2 

443 

John  McNealy 

George  Caleb 

2 

444 

" 

John  Leacy 

2 

445 

Matthew  K.  Nawn 

Michael  Harkins 

I 

446 

Geo.  H.  Noone 

Arthur  Keuney 

2 

447 

"     " 

John  Bird 

2 

51 


ESTABLISHED  1K41 


2l/.   iP.    Stone  &  Co. 


Manufacturers  of 


Wagons,  Caravans   and  Sleds 

CARRIAGE     PAINTING 


Repairing  in  all  Branches 
175  and  J 79  West  J/rst  Street  -  South  i^oston 

A.  H.  Proctor cS:  Co.    W.  L.  SNOW 


Successors  to  PROCTOR  &  CLAPP 
Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

HAY,      GRAIN, 
FEED,  STRAW,  ETC. 

Imported  German   Peat   Moss 


14-16  Cambridge  St.,  -  East  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Cambridge  mo 


DORCHESTER 

Would  like  to  supply  your  table  with. 

Genuine  New 
Laid   Eggs 


Received  direct  from  poultry  farmers  who 
use  great  care.  A  sample  order  will 
mean  a  permanent  customer   .-.     /.     .-. 

p.  O.  BOX    1  7 

Upham's  Corner,      -     Dorchester 


-TEUERMOIME    123-7-0.     RICM. 


JV.  B.   HOWARD'S 

BACK  BAY,  SOUTH   &  WEST  END 
EXPRESS 


Stand,    14    Dock  Square,    Boston 

52 


CLASS  22.— CONTRACTORS— Co;///;/ //£'<(' 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

448 

449 

Johu  T.  vScully  &  Bro. 

David  Cahill 
Michael  J.  Curran 

2 

4 

CLASS  23,  —  TRUCKMEN— Singles 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows:  — Three   Firsts,  three   Seconds,  three 
Thirds,  three  Fourths,  and  three  Highly  Commended  Ribbons. 


450 

Abbott  &  Fernald  Co 

451 

4< 

452 

" 

453 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

454 

" 

455 

W.  C.  Bray 

456 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

457 

Johu  J.  Canessa 

458 

A.  M.  Davis 

459 

James  W.  Grady 

460 

E.  S.  Harris 

461 

" 

462 

Wm.  F.  Hill 

463 

Solomon  B.  Holman 

464 

A."W.  Knight 

464a 

Wyman  Libby 

465 

W.  J.  Macaulay 

466 

Daniel  A.  Smith 

467 

u 

468 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

469 

Wm.  C.  Webber 

470 

Whipple  &  Co. 

471 

" 

472 

„ 

Eugene  Geary 

Patrick  Handrahan 

John  J.  Leslie 

Wm.  F.  Claverie 

James  Douglass 

Everett  Mclntire 

Michael  White 

James  MacArthur 

Thomas  F.  Cook 

James  W.  Grady 

Chas.  W.  Harris 

John  J.  Slattery 

Richard  T.  Hunt 

John  T.  McQuade 

Johu  J.  Mahoney 

Clarence  W.  Libby 

Walter  J.  Macaiilay 

Thomas  Flynn 

Daniel  A.  Smith 

Robert  A.  Davidson 

Remus  Burt 

G.  E.  Kenisou 

T.  J.  Mullen 

Charles  Roberts 


53 


U  Y 


Chase's  Superfine  Fawn  Wool 
Square  Blankets 

BEST  BLANKET  FOR  TRUCK  PURPOSES 
LOOK  FOR  THE  THREE  HORSE  HEAD  TRADE-MARK 

When  buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the  word  "CHASE" 


JOHN   FEENEY 

Dowel    Brothers 

Roofer  and  metal  iUorker 

SLATE,  COPPER,  TIN  and  GRAVEL 
ROOFING      ::       ::       GALVANIZED 
IRON     and    COPPER     WORKS 

BMCKSniTH/ 

TELEPHONE    1168-3    HAYMARKET 

Office 

i^   North   Grove   Street,   Boston 

55 

PALMER     STREET 

TEAMING 

ROXBURY 

ENOS   D.   SAWYER,   Pres. 


EDWARD   S.   SAWYER,   Treas. 


K.    D.    SAWYER     LUMBER    CO. 


Lumber  Dealers 


24:     Co^iTibridge     Street 


KAST     CAMBRIDGE,     M  ASSACHUSKTTS 

54 


CLASS  23.— TRUCKMEN— Siugles—ry;///«/^^rf 


No. 

of 

Entry 


473 
474 
475 
476 


OWNER'S  NAME 


Whipple  &  Co. 
D.  S.  Woodberry 

C.  Iv.  York 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Fred  A.  Phelps 

Louis  Burkhardt 

Wm.  Vickery 

Edward  J.  Jennings 


CLASS  24.— TRUCKMEN.— Doubles 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award   prizes  as   follows  : — Five    Firsts,    five  Seconds,    five 
Thirds,  five  Fourths,  and  five  Highly  Commended  ribbons. 


477 

Abbott  &  Fernald 

Joe  Morton 

2 

478 

., 

John  Coleman 

2 

479 

Boston  Elev.  Ry.  Co. 

John  Coffey 

2 

480 

« 

Thomas  Murray 

2 

481 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

D.  J.  Buckley 

2 

482 

<. 

Wm.  Buchanan 

2 

483 

W.  C.  Bray 

Wm.  H.  Parrott 

2 

484 

u 

Leonard  L.  Cook 

2 

485 

.< 

Fred  Fyler 

2 

486 

« 

J.  E.  Pinkham 

2 

487 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

Wm.  S.  McKendry 

2 

488 

« 

Rollie  C.  Stevens 

2 

489 

Chick,  White  &  Co. 

Leforest  Gray 

2 

489a 

H.  Cousens  &  Son 

Arthur  Crafts 

2 

490 

A.  M.  Davis 

Edwin  P.  Hudson 

2 

491 

R.J.  Elder 

Bernard  Peterson 

2 

492 

" 

Charles  Bissett 

2 

493 

u 

Daniel  Donahue 

2 

494 

•• 

Clayton  Seyboyer 

2 

495 

W.  L.  Hallett 

Joseph  H.  Robishaw 

2 

496 

W.  B.  Hammond 

Martin  Welch 

2 

497 

E.  S.  Harris 

Patrick  Lydou 

2 

498 

„ 

Fred  Donnie 

2 

55 


TELEPHONE  HAYMARKET  NO.  491  &  492 


C.     BBRRV     &     CO 

lmi)oiters  and  Wliolesale  Dealers  in 

TlJines   and  jCiquors 


t^oHiers  of^ 


jCa£fer,     ^le    and  Shorter 


rR()rKii:TORS  01 


Kerry's    *Diamonci    2l^eddinff   ^J/e   and 
bourdon     Tl^hiskei/        J^         J^         J^ 

84  to  88  Leverett  St.,  and  2  to  8  Ashland  St.  ...  BoSton,  MaSS. 

Compliments  of  / 

Iborter's  fl^afket 


He.« 


^f " ^> 


1 51  Summer  Street         _        .        .        .  Boston 


W.     M.     ROBINSON 


?4ag,  Cf^ratn.  i^tram,  Poultry  Jooli 


CLASS  24.— TRUCKMEN.— Doubles- G^ ;///;/ /^i-^/ 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

499 

E.  S.  Harris 

Joseph  W.  Harris 

2 

500 

Wm.  F.  Hill 

Herbert  Jones 

2 

501    , 

" 

Wm.  Linsky 

2 

502 

Johnson  &  Co. 

Samuel  Johnson 

2 

503 

" 

Wm.  A.  Mellish 

2 

504 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Carrol  S.  Jacobs 

2 

505 

Gilbert  McWilliams 

2 

506 

James  C,  Mullen^ 

James  C.  Mullen 

2 

507 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Frank  Peck 

2 

508 

" 

Albert  Hutchinson 

2 

509 

" 

Joseph  Joslin 

2 

510 

« 

N.  Green 

2 

511 

" 

Henry  Philbrick 

2 

512 

Whipple  &  Co. 

Martin  J.  Foley 

2 

513 

u 

William  Murray 

2 

514 

" 

John  Ames 

2 

515 

" 

Wm.  Brown 

2 

516 

" 

James  F.  McMillian 

2 

517 

" 

Abel  Northern 

2 

518 

D.  S.  Woodberry 

Frank  LaVie 

2 

519 

C.  L.  York 

Alex  Wood 

2 

520 

" 

Charles  Otis  York 

2 

CLASS  25.— TRUCKMEN— Threes 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  whatever  prize  they  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


521 


Abbott  &  Fern  aid  Co. 


John  Fl3mn 


57 


At\A/ood    &    McManus 


\ 


Maiiiijacturers.  of  all  Kinds  of 

WOODEN    BOXES.    PACKING 
CASES  and  KINDLING  WOOD 

Telephone  Connection 


Factory    and    Office,     Carter    Street    and    FovirtH    Street 
CHELSEA,     MASS. 


CHARLES  W.  SABIN     Sargent  6^  Ham  Co 


Harness 

and 

Saddlery 

3  J   OTIS  STREET,  BOSTON 


H.  SARGENT  A.  P.  HAM  A.  A.  SARGENT 


Jptne  CarrmgVg 

Highest  Award  at  Centennial  Exposition    ^ 

1876  Q 

26,  28  and  30  Bowker  Street 

BOSTON 


i 


EDW.  A.  RICH,  President  CHAS.  W.  HALLSTRAM,  Treasurer 

Union   Ice   Company 


17i   T  WHarf 


BOSTON 


58 


CLASS  26 —TRUCKMEN— Fours 

lu    this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  Prizes  as  follows:  one  First,    oue  Second,    one  Third, 
cue  Fourth. 


Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

522 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

Peter  F.  Dolau 

4 

523 

Blinu,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Mike  Devereaux 

4 

524 

R.  J.  Elder 

Edward  Morse 

4 

524a 

James  S.  Hilliard  &  Son 

Thos.  Carghill 

4 

525 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Edward  Tighe 

4 

526 

A^ 

Henry  Ballard 

4 

527 

C.  L.  York         y 

John  McDonald 

4 

CLASS  27.— MULES 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  prizes  as  they  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


528 

Charles  S.  Gove  &  Co. 

James  J.  Bowshell 

I 

529 

S.  D.  Hicks  &  Son      " 

Patrick  J.  Clements 

2 

530 

Wm.  H.  Smith  &  Co. 

Wm.  Henry  Smith 

I 

59 


Air  Cushion 


RUBBER 
HORSE-SHOE 


Pads 


Especially  Adapted  for  Work  Horses 


Order  by  name  and  take  no  substitute  — COST  NO  MORE 
There  is  no  lameness  witli  Air  Cushion  Pads 
Don't  have  a  lame  horse  in  your  barn 

It  is  as  essential  for  your  work  horses  to  be  shod  witli  Pads 
as  it  is  for  your  pleasure  horses 


iii^ 


REVERE  RUBBER  CO. 


Sole 
Manufacturers 


Boston,  Mass. 


THE    KOE55LE    PREWEKT 


P. 


jCaaer  SSc 


remium  a^ayer  ^jeer 


<IN       WOOD       OR       BOTTLKS 

\^.JMatiire^  in  the   OLD   WAT,  and  over  four  months  old. 
Ms  the  highest  type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  consider- 
ing Quality,  Age,  Substance,  Purity  and  Aroma,  and  is 
Absolute  Perfection 


Csiabitsheci  /S46 


w 


Office,  Brewery  and  Bottling  Department 


li250    QOLUnPUS    AVENUE 


BOSTON 


(U) 


Alderiuau,  Dr.  II.  L. 
Allin,  H.  N. 

Bacon,  Joel  V. 
Barnes,  Dr.  William  F). 
Beckett,  Dr.  E.  C. 
Blackwood,  Dr.  Thomas 
Brigham,  William  E. 
Bunker,  Dr.  Madison 
Bush,  W.  W. 

Coldwell,  Elias 

Dews,  Dr.  H.  H. 
Draper,  Dr.  A.  W. 
Duffill,  J.  H. 
Dwelley,  A.  W. 

Ethier,  Napoleon 

Fitch,  Dr.  A.  H. 


Gilligan,  Wm. 
Glancy,  W.  J. 


LIST  OF  JUDGES,  1905. 

Hanson,  William 
Harrington,  G.  W. 
Hoffman,  E.  H. 
Hill,  Dr.  A.  G. 


Jewell,  C.  II. 
Johnson,  Arthur  R. 

Kenney,  James 

La  Baw,  Dr.  W.  Iv. 
Lee,  Dr.  George 
Low,  W.  H. 

Manley,  Lowell 
Marston,  F.  A. 
Matthews,  Joseph  B. 
May.  Dr.  A.  W. 
McManus,  H.  P. 
McKenney,  J.  D. 
McLeod,  A.  B. 

Parker,  Augustus  H. 
Pettigrew,  J.  A. 
Pierce,  Dr.  B.  D. 
Porter,  Tlieron  H. 


Pugsley,  J.  O. 

Robinson,  J.  E. 
Robinson,  N.  T. 
Rogers,  Dr.  II.  P. 
Rollin,  J.  H. 

vShea,  Daniel 
Shea,  Thomas 
Souther,  Dr.  H.  A. 
Smith,  Louis 
Sullivan,  John  H. 

Tenney,  George  B. 
Tighe,  Thomas  F. 
Trow,  John 


Wales,  S.  W. 
Whalen,  Dan. 
White,  Dr.  A.  F. 
White,  Dr.  W.  T. 
Wright,  Harry  E. 
Whittemore,  W.  P. 
Winslow,  W.  C. 
Wood,  Dr.  C.  R. 


LIST 

R.  L.  Agassiz 

American   Humane  Education 

Society  (Veteran   Driver's 

Medal) 
Geo.  T.  Angell 
Mrs.  William  Appleton 
Gen.  W.  A.  Bancroft 
Walter  C.  Baylies 
Mrs.  J.  Arthur  Beebe 

E.  Pierson  Beebe 
A.  S.  Bigelow 
Mrs.  Arthur  Blake 
Stephen  Bullard 

I.  Tucker  Burr 
Mrs.  A.  T.  Cabot 
C.  A.  Campbell 
Samuel  Carr 
Eliot  C.  Clarke 
George  G.  Crocker 
Frederic  Cunningham 
Mrs.  Samuel  Eliot 
Fells  Ice  Co. 

F.  P.  Fish 

Mrs.  Reginald  Foster 


OF  CONTRIBUTORS  IN 

]Mrs.  Edward  Frothingham 

Edward  W.  Grew 

Mrs.  John  E.  Hudson 

Miss  Nora  lasigi 

George  B.  Inches 

Mrs.  C.  W.  Kennard 

Miss  Louise  Kennedy 

Amorj^  A.  Lawrence 

R.  A.  Lawrence 

William  Caleb  Loring 

Geo.  S.  Mandell 

Mrs.  F.  C.  Manning 

Miss  Margaret  Manning 

Mass.  Society  for  the  Preven- 
tion of'  Cruelty  to  Ani- 
mals (Old  Horse  Medal) 

Arthur  G.  Merwiu 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 
Mrs.  Arthur  N.  Milliken 
Eugene  S.  Morse 
"Ormond,  Florida" 
Miss  Charlotte  Parsons 
Charles  J.  Paine 
F.  A.  Peters 


1905 

Mrs.  J.  C.  Phillips 

Mrs.  Sarah  G.  Putnam 

Goldberg  &  Rathman 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

Red  Acre  Farm 

"Rival" 

Miss  Marion  Russell 

Miss  Katharine  Roosevelt 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

Francis  Shaw 

Miss  B.  Shimmin 

Dr.  F.  P.  Sprague 

Miss  Roxana  Stackpole 

Mrs.  Daniel  Staniford 

The  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co. 

James  J.  Storrow 

Mrs.  Robert  S.  Sturgis 

Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer 

John  E.  Thayer 

T.  Tighe  &  Sons 

Fred  J.  Walker 

Samuel  D.  Warren 

George  Wigglesworth 

Ralph  B.  Williams 


61 


W.J.WELCH  J.  F.  DWYER  J.J.GRADY 

WELCH,  DWYER  &  GRADY 

...Manufacturers  of... 

MILK    X^T  GROCERT 


Wagons 


BREAD       V  V    rl  >^  I   I  I   I  >     EXPRESS 


^   ^    All  Repairing  will  receive  careful  atteiition    ^    j^ 
89  Mystic  Avenue  _  _  _  _  Somerville,  Mass. 


Compliments  of 


A.  ®.  i>trarnH  ICumb^r  OIo 


The  Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co 


DRAPERIES,  WALL  PAPERS,  WALL  HANGINGS,  FURNITURE 
TO  ORDER,  CARPETS,  DECORATIVE  PAINTING,  PLAIN 
PAINTING,  PAPIER  MACHE,  FURNITURE  COVERINGS,  RUGS 


Telephone.  Main  6640  S  Bosworth  Street,  Boston 

62 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS,  1905 


Abrauis  Myer  &  Co.  ^  ^ 
Americau  National  Bank     >\ 
Atwood  &  McManus      b^ 
Baker,  Walter  Co.  Limited 
Barrett,  C.  B,    lo  '^ 
Bartlett,  vS.  h. 
Bay  State  Fuel  Co.    /(j 
Berry,  C.  &  Co.       S\^ 
Berry,  Thomas  W.  ^\> 
Berry  &  Tibbets  li  if 
Breck,  Joseph  &  Sons,  Corp. 
Biggi  &  Ivcverone     Id  <-* 
Blinn.  Morrill  &  Co.   3  ?- 
Bond,  F,  M.  '^'^ 
Boston  Molasses  Co.    "A  ^ 
Boston    Suburban    Express   ^ 

Parcel  Co.  (f  ^ 
Buck,  C.  H.  &  Co.  "^  "^ 
Cahill,  Geo.  H.       oA 
Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co.  ^f 
Columbia  Road  Stable  Co.  H  ' 
City  Laundry      3  '?> 
Connor,  John  T.  ^'^ 
Copley,  A.  H.  Co. 
Cronon  &  Foss 
Dodge,  Edwin  D.-^" 
Dorchester  Ice  Co.  )>p 
Dowd  Bros.     JT^-V 
Feeney,  John  F.    S'^ 
Fells  Ice  Co.    >^ 
Fifield,  Richardson  &  Co.  S-' 
Fox,  George  G.  Co.    o'^ 
Frediani,  M.  &  Son     ij> 


>VvV 


Gilligaii,  •William    ^  "' 
Goldberg  &  Rathman     ^  ^ 
Gore,  Chas.  S.  &  Co.  '  '^ 
Hilliard,  J.  S.  &  Sou     ^"^ 
Howard,  G.  B.&  Co.   ^"^ 
Howard,  W.  B.  i''^ 
Hovey,  C.  F.  &.  Co.  3  ^ 
Hood,  H.  P.  &  Sons    ^^ 
Jordan,  Marsh  Co.     ^'^ 
Joy  Steamship  Co.  Line  h  '''■• 
Kennett,  R.  A.    "b  (<=        . 
London  Harness  Co.  T 
Lowney  Walter  M.  3  "+■ 
Myers,  David  &  Co.if  ^ 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co.  '- 
McKeiiuey  &  Waterbury  >S 
Mansfield  Lumber  Co. 
Morse,  Eugene  S.  J^o 
McCall,  P.    "i"- 
O'Brien,  Thomas  J.    4"^ 
O'Keeffe,  M. 

Perry,  Lewis  F.  &  Whitney  Co.  ^i^ 
Porter's  Market      ^"^ 
Priest,  T.J.  ScCoAi 
Proctor  Bros,    o^ 
Proctor,  A.  H.  &  Co.  -" 
Packard,  J.  D.  &  Sons 
Perkins  Wood  Working  Co. 
Plant,  Thomas  G.  Co.  '"^ 
Pierce,  S.  S.  Co.     ^rH 
Pureoxia  Co.,  The  ^1- *& 
Robinson,  W.  M.     ^\s> 
Revere  Rubber  Co.     '"'- 


Li-  U> 


^< 


3%' 


Richardson,  J.  H. 
Roessle  Brewery,  The 
vSabin,  Charles  W.   ^ 
Sargent  &  Ham  Co.  ^^ 
Sawyer,  E.  D.     S'^ 
Shattuck  &  Jones 
Scully,  John  T.  cS:  Bro.    ^^ 
Stewart,  M.  A.      i  u 
Snow,  Wm.  L- C^ 
Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co.  ^^ 
Sumner's  Market   "^^  -^ 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry 
Talbot,  J.  C.      ^  ' 
Tighe,  J.  T.  Coal  Co.  <^^' 
Tighe,  T.  &  Sons 
Tufts,  Nathan  &  Sons    ^   "^ 
Upham's  Corner  Stable  Co.    ^  ^ 
Union  Ice  Co.     i  ^ 
Van  Buskirk,  Charles     U-    ^-' 
Washburn-Crosby  Co. 
Walker,  J.  G.  &  Sons    ^  ^ 
Warren  Bros.  Co.    '-  ' 
Welch,  Dwyer  &  Grady    b  > 
Whipple  &  Co. 
White,  A.  F.  Dr.  L  ^ 
White,  R.  H.  Co.      -"  -^ 
Whittemore,  W.  P.     ^^ 
Whiting,  D.  &  Sons     "^ 
Wetherbee,  J.  O.     ^^+. 
Woodberry,  D.  S.  ■^s' 
Woods,  John  M.  &  Co.  -  ^ 
Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins    l<^ 


CHIEF  MARSHAL 
JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  Bid 


AIDS 
K.  Iv.  CLARKE  ARTHUR  PERRIX  J.  F.    ^YATERS 

W.   D.  QUniBY  J.  H.   SMITH  R.  S.  COXOVER 

L.  F.  GAVET,   B.  AV.  WHITCOINIB 

AND  OTHERS 


Go 


GERMAN  PEAT  MOSS  stable  bedding 

IT     WILL    NOT    BURN 

The  Jicst,  Cheapest,  and  Healthiest  in  the  world;   keeping  the  horses  clean,  feet  soft, 


and  giving  pure  air  in  the  stable 


PRICES 
Single  Bales    .     .     .     . 
Four  Bales  for      ... 
Six  Bales  on  board  cars 
Car  Lots,  per  bale     .     . 


$  3.00 
11.00 
15.00 
2.25 


PETROLATUM  HOOF  STUFFING 

NATURE'S    OWN    REMEDY 

Large  Pails $1.50 

Half  Pails 1.00 

The  best  Stuffiiif;  in  the  world  for  keep- 
ing: horses'  feet  in  perfect  order 


Discount  to  the  trade.      Send  for  Circa 


C  B»  BARRETT,  Importer,       45  North  Market  Street,       Boston,  Mass. 


Established  1856 


Telephone,  g8i  Richmond 


A. F.WHITE,  V.S. 

SPECIALIST   IN    DISEASES  OF 
THE    FEET    AND    LIMBS,    AND 

Expert  Horse  Shoer 

Personal  attention  given  to  shoeing 
All  shoes  fitted  cold 
Horses  called  for  and  returned 
Telephone,  Richmond  1055-2 

HOSPITAL  and  FORGE 

116  WASHINGTON    ST.,    North 

Near  Causeway,  Boston,  Mass. 

J.  0.  Wetherbee  Co. 

Lumber 
Dealers 

No,  240  Causeway  Street 
BOSTON 

PRIVATE  SALES  and 
EXCHANGES     EVERY    DAY 


Auction  Sales 

EVERY  WEDNESDAY  and 
SATURDAY    at    10    a.   m. 


Consignments  Solicited 

Always  on  hand  upward  of  200  Horses 

of  all  grades 


Telephone,     -     1184  Hayniarket 

Cable    Address,     "HORSES," 

Boston 


Myer  Abrams  &  Co, 

INTERNATIONAL      HORSE 
and  HARNESS  EXCHANGE 

The    Largest    Horse    Emporium    in    New     England 

191  to  197  Friend  St.        32  to  38  Travers  St. 

Near  North  Union  Station 

Largest  Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  In  New  England  of  HARNESS,  ROBES, 

BLANKETS,  and  GENERAL  HORSE  EQUIPMENTS 
We  carry  the  Largest  Stock  and  sell  at  Lowest  Prices 

In  no  case  do  we  guarantee  against  accident,  sickness,  or  death 


64 


J.   T.    Tighe    Company 


BEST  GRADES 
FAMILY  and 

STEAM 


Coal 


LOWEST 

CASH 

PRICES 


TELEPHONE.   156   SOUTH    BOSTON 


'WHarf :    First  Street  foot  of  F  Yard  :    331  ^Vest  FourtH  Street 

SOUTH    BOSTON 


CreaiiAer-WiiAg  Laundry  Coinpanv 


Telephone,  'rrenu)i\r  lOo 


59  West  Mewron  Street 


SATISFACTION   means  much  to  you 

You  receive  THE  BEST  GRADE  OF  LAUNDERING  at  standard  prices 
Our  delivery  service  is  prompt 


Telephone  or  write  to 


Columbia  Square 


ijsrc. 


Telephone,  210-3   Dorchester 


DORCHESTER 


65 


USE  WASHBURN  -  CROSBY'S 

GOLD  MEDAL 
FLOUR 


GKO.    G     FOX   CO. 


Olatirl^isto^^m,  :^d:£iss. 


SPECIALTIES  —  Mother's  Bread  and  Fox's  Pies 


Manufacturer  s'      of 

MINERAL    WATERS 

FLAVORED 
BEVERAGES 


Dealers      in 

CHAMPAGNE  S 
and    BRANDIES 


CHARLES  S.  GOVE  &  CO. 

Establislied  1864 

irvlPORXERS   AND   DISTILLERS   OK 

FINE     OLD    WHISKIES 

Bottlers  of  Ale,  Lager  Beer  and  Porter 

78-80  MERRIMAC  ST.  78-79-81  PITT  ST. 

BOSTON,   MASS. 


Teleph.on.e,     0'22     Hayoiarl-cet 


P.  O.  Box,  165: 


66 


2Joston  Suburban  Crpress  ant  parcel  Co. 

Packages  collected  and  delivered  in  all  parts  of 
BOSTON 

ARLINGTON  CHELSEA  MEDFORD  SOMERVILLE 

AUBURNDALE  DORCHESTER  NEWTON  WEvST  NEWTON 

BROOKLINE  EAST  BOSTON  NEWTON  CENTRE  WEST   ROXBURY 

CAMBRIDGE  MALDEN  NORTH  CAMBRIDGE  WINTHROP 


Write,  Call  or  'Phone  Main  5200  Express  Telephone  Service 


50-60    Batterymarch  St.  ^S'^J    Broad  St. 


ABBOTT  &  rERNALD  COMPANY 


Crutfemen  anti  JFortoartiers 


Teiepi««,  Ml.  2..0I  .         .         .         257  Coiigress  Stceei,  Boston 


JOHN  T.   CONNOR 

Subway    Contractor 


7 1    Palmer  Street  .  _  _  -  Boston 

67 


THE      IDEAL      ROADAVAY 

The  Bitulithic  Pavement 

SAFEST    FOOTING    FOR    HORSES 
EASIEST  TRACTION  FOR  WAGONS 

WARREN  BROTHERS  COMPANY 

93   Federal   Street  BOSTON,  MASS. 


Compliments  of 


M.    O'KEEFFE 


JOSEPH    BRECK  &  SONS,   Corp. 

Dealers  in  ALL  KINDS  OF  STABLE  FITTINGS 


Mangers 
Hay  Racks 
Stall  Partitions 
Salt  Bricks 


ASn   FOR   CATALOGUE 


Stall  Cutters 

Water  Troughs 

Wheel  Jacks 

Etc. 


51  and  52  North  MarKet  Street,  BOSTON 

68 


JOY  LINE  /<?  NEW  YORK 

**^Cl   the    way   by    water" 
REDUCED    RATES  SERVICE    UNEXCELLED 


Lowest  Freight  Rates 

TRI-WEEKLY    SAILINGS 

FOR   RATES  AND  INFORMATION  ADDRESS 

W.  E.  STORER,  Gen.  Freight  Agt.  B.  D.  PITTS,  Agent 

308    Congress    Street,    Boston 


F.    G.    ALLNUTT 


Provisions 


HARVARD  SQUARE  CAMBRIDGE,    MASS. 


69 


PERKINS  WOOD -WORKING  CO. 


Wood-Working  of  Every  Description 

Cabinet  Work,  Office  and  Store  Fittings,  Builders'  Finisli,  Flooring,  General  Mill  Work, 

Kiln  Dried  Lumber 


WAREHAM  AND  MALDEN  STS.  :  BOSTON,  MASS. 


Telephones  14  and  is  tremont 


FREDERIC    M.    BOND 

Dealer  in   Grain,   Hay   and   Straw 

39      BOYLSTON      STRKET 
BROOK  LINK,     M:ASS. 


THE 

AMERICAN     NATIONAL    BANK 

FRANKLIN  AND  DEVONSHIRE  STS.,  BOSTON 


:i|al/$2 


CAPITlAL /$2pO,OOp 


/ 


7 


H.  J.  PATTERSON,  President  J.  MIDDLEBY,  Jr.,  Vice-President  HERBERT  A.  LIBBY,  Cashier 

DI|JECTORS 
Albert  C.  Ashton  Frank  P.  Bennett  Charles  I^.  Burnham,  Jr.       /   Frederick  A.  Casey  Charles  B.  Ladd 

D.T.Montague  Jos.  Middleby,  Jr.  H.  J.  Paty^erson  /   George  Wi.  Taylor  Andreas  Tomfohrde 

John  F.  Towle  Wilbur  F.  Whitney  '         James  A.  Whitcomb  Charles  O.  Whitten 

J  \ 

Accounts  solicited  and  special  attention  given  to  small  depositors 


MOLASSES 

FEED  IT  TO  YOUR  HORSES 

BECAUSE:-  \W^^^ 

It  regulates  the  bowels,  keeping  the  stock  in  /    . 

better  condition,  and  doing  away  with  condi-  \J  j    \ 

tion  powders.  //+    p^ 

It  helps  assimilate  other  foods,  and  insures  thor-  \  \         '    ^\ 

ough  digestion.  .   j3J^>^r^*>* 

It  produces  a  glossy  coat,  V^lOaJbi/srJ^ 

It  will  eradicate  worms,  ^,         <rn:.^ 

It  may  be  advantageously   employed  for  ren-  aaaAa/\> 

dering  inferior  hay  or  fodder  palatable. 

It  is  the  CHEAPEST  CARBOHYDRATE 
food  on  the  market. 


We  import  molasses  from  Cuba,  which  is  particularly  adapted  to 
feeding  stock.  If  your  grocer  or  grain  dealer  does  not  keep  it, 
write  to  us  and  we  will  tell  you  where  to  get  it.     Send  for  booklet. 


BOvSTON,   MAY  24,   1905. 

I  have  used  molasses  iu  my  horses  feed  for  the  past  six  mouths,  aud  fiud  there 
is  uo  doubt  but  that  it  fatteus  horses  much  better  than  any  grain  that  can  be  fed. 
Molasses  don't  physic  my  horses,  I  find,  and  seems  to  add  to  their  strength. 

R.  J.  ELDER. 


Boston    Molasses    Co. 

24-26   BROAD  STREET,  :  BOSTON,  MASS. 

71 


eSFABLISHED     IS55  TELEPHONE,     739  Oxford 

NA/HIPRLE:  8c  comranv 

I-I.     W.     PUTINKV 


TRUCKMEN 


Offios:   163   Essex   Street,    Boston    rf    r^ 

Corner  Lincoln  and  Tufts  Streets  J^  Corner  Pearl  and  Purchase  Streets 

69  Chauncy  Street  J»  Milton  Place  '*  81  Franklin  Street 


STANDS 


COMPLIMENTS 

of 


R.  H.  WHITE  CO. 


The  Medals,  Ribbons  and  Badges  for  this   parade   were  furnislied   by   Boston         1 
Badge  Company,  Old  South  Building,  Boston,  Mr.  A.  eT.  Berge,  Mr.  S.  E.  Spencer 


72 


\ 


BdSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


1906 


A         /»      • 


CATALOGUE 


Instnn  Waxk  l^orst  farai^ 
Ass0riati0n 


FOURTH  ANNUAL  PARADE 


iiag  3mi|,  1906 


1906 

A.  T.  BLISS   &   CO. 

15  O  S  T  O  N 


BOARD   OF  DIRECTORS    FOR    1906. 
HENRY  C.  MERWIN,  President. 

state  House,  Room  356. 

RANDOLPH  K.  CLARKE,  Vice-President, 

7.'  IJncoln  Street. 

ARTHUR  PERRIN,  Vice-President, 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline. 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD,  Secretary, 

lOT   Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d,  Treasurer, 

City  Hall. 


JOHN  H.  JEWETT,   Boston  Herald. 

FRANCIS  PEABODY,  Jr.,  Devonshire  Building. 

AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.R.C.V.S.,  State  House,  Room  138. 

WM.  D.   QLTIMBY,  6  Merrimac  Street. 

JOHN  H.   SMITH,  571   Atlantic  Avenue. 

BENJ.   W.  WELLS,  Fire  Department,  Bristol  Street. 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


N  April,  1902,  an  article  appeared  in  the  Boston  Transcript 
which  advocated  the  holding  in  Boston  of  a  work  horse 
parade.  This  suggestion  caught  the  eye  of  Mr.  R.  A.  Law- 
rence, who  had  long  desired  to  see  such  a  parade  established 
in  Boston,  and  who  was  familiar  with  the  working  of  the- 
London  and  Liverpool  cart  horse  parade  societies.  Mr. 
Lawrence  called  upon  the  writer  of  the  Transcript  article, 
and  it  was  agreed  between  them  that  an  attempt  should  be  made  in  this 
direction. 

Very  few  persons  appeared  to  be  interested  in  the  project,  but  after 
some  delay  an  association  was  formed,  with  the  following  officers:  — 
President,  R.  A.  Lawrence;  Secretary,  H.  C.  Merwin;  Treasurer,  Dr. 
Austin  Peters;  Directors,  Joshua  Atwood,  3d;  R.  K.  Clarke,  H.  K. 
Lyman,  Arthur  Perrin,  C.  S.  Rackemann.  The  first  intention  was  to 
hold  the  parade  on  Labor  Day,  1902.  It  was  found,  however,  that  the 
time  was  too  short;  moreover,  the  selection  of  Labor  Day  was  dis- 
approved by  many  teamsters,  and  for  these  reasons  the  parade  was  post- 
poned to  Memorial  Day,  May  30,  1903.  Early  in  the  Spring,  preparations 
were  begun,  Mr.  Clarke  becoming  Vice-President,  and  Mr.  W.  D. 
Qiiimby,  a  master  truckman,  being  added  to  the  list  of  directors.  It  was 
Mr.  Quimby,  who  suggested  the  scheme  of  drivers'  certificates,  a  valuable 
feature  of  the  parade,  and  certainly  an  improvement  upon  the  English 
system.  The  conditions  upon  which  these  certificates  are  awarded  will 
be  found  stated  below. 

Later,  ]Mr.  John  H.  Jewett  of  the  Boston  Herald,  a  recognized 
authority  upon  horse  flesh  in  all  its  forms;  Mr.  John  H.  Smith,  a  leading 
truckman,  and  Dr.  John  W.  Bartol  of  the  State  Board  of  Health,  also 
became  directors. 


The  prospect  at  iirst  was  discouraging.  Contributions  came  in 
slowl}',  and  3000  printed  circulars  which  had  been  sent  through  the 
mail  appeared  to  have  gone  into  the  waste  basket  iniread.  The  Directors, 
however,  were  optimistic,  and  when  Mr.  Lawrence,  the  President  of  the 
Association,  deposited  a  thousand  dollar  bond  with  the  Treasurer,  as  a 
guaranty  fund,  they  felt  sure  of  ultimate  success.  Gradually,  too,  the 
owners  of  work-horses  awoke  to  the  situation,  and  when  the  entries 
closed  the}'  were  found  to  number  four  hundred  and  fifty-four.  The 
parade  was  a  triumphant  success.  Over  $500  were  distributed  in  prizes, 
in  addition  to  the  rosettes,  and  some  special  prizes  were  also  awarded, 
one  in  particular  to  old  King  Coal,  a  famous  black  horse  of  great  size 
and  beauty,  belonging  to  the  Metropolitan  Coal  Company.  This  horse 
headed  the  procession,  which  extended  over  nearly  four  miles,  and  was 
witnessed  with  enthusiasm  by  a  large  crowd  of  spectators. 

The  interest  shown  by  the  drivers  in  the  parade  can  fairly  be 
described  as  intense.  They  appeared  to  care  little  or  nothing  for  the 
money  which  the  winners  received  —  what  they  were  thinking  of  was 
the  possible  honor  to  be  bestowed  upon  their  horses;  and  most  of  them, 
when  they  approached  the  reviewing  stand  where  the  prizes  were 
awarded,  were  observed  to  be  pale  with  apprehension.  Roughly  speak- 
ing, ever}'  other  man  received  a  prize,  and  yet,  as  the  Association  found 
to  its  sorrow,  many  of  the  drivers  were  grievously  disappointed  at  the 
failure  of  their  horses  to  obtain  a  ribbon. 

Soon  after  the  first  parade  the  Association  was  incorporated  under 
the  laws  of  Massachusetts;  this  being  done  under  the  direction  and  at 
the  expense  of  C.  S.  Rackemann,  Esq.,  to  whose  legal  and  practical  judg- 
ment the  Association  i^  greatly  indebted. 

The  second  parade,  held  May  30,  1904,  was  substantially  a  duplicate 
of  the  first  except  that  it  was  larger,  and  except  also  that  additional  prizes 
were  offered  for  Veteran  Drivers,  and  for  Old  Horses. 

The  Veteran  Driver  prize,  a  silver  medal  contributed  by  the 
American  Humane  Education  Society,  through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq.,  was 
intended  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  could  show  the  longest  term 
of  service  with  one  concern.  The  medal  was  won  by  Mr.  P.  Carney,  a 
driver  for  the  Metropolitan  Coal  Company,  and  its  predecessor  in  the 
business,  with  a  record  of  thirty-nine  years.  The  large  chestnut  horse 
driven  by  Mr.  Carney  also  took  a  blue  ribbon,  and  both  man  and  horse 
may  still  be  seen,  almost  every  working  day,  delivering  coal  on  Beacon 
Hill. 


In  1905,  this  prize  was  won  by  Thomas  Haley,  an  employee  of  the 
A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Company,  with  a  record  of  forty  years.  Next 
came  Patrick  CaUaghan,  who  had  served  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corpor- 
ation for  thirty-eight  years,  and  Timothy  Foley,  a  driver  for  the  Metro- 
politan Coal  Compan}',  with  a  record  of  thirty-seven  years.  The 
Association  also  gives  a  bronze  medal  to  every  Veteran  Driver,  properl}' 
entered,  whose  length  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  more.  In  1905,  the 
number  of  bronze  medals  awarded  was  sixteen. 

The  Old  Horse  class,  now  the  most  interesting  feature  of  the  parade, 
was  started  in  1904,  the  first  prize,  a  handsome  gold  medal,  being  con- 
tributed by  the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to 
Animals.  Prizes  in  this  class  are  awarded  to  those  horses  who  present 
the  best  appearance,  age  and  length  of  service  considered.  The  winner  in 
1904  was  Chubb,  owned  by  the  Boston  Elevated  Railwa}^  Company,  and 
driven  b}^  Wm.  J.  Harkness. 

In  1905  this  class  was  divided,  the  first  division  being  for  horses  that 
had  served  fifteen  years  or  more  ;  the  second  division  including  horses 
that  had  served  ten  years  or  more,  and  less  than  fifteen.  The  gold  medal 
in  the  first  division  was  won  in  1905  by  Ned,  thirty  years  old,  a  bay  geld- 
ing weighing  about  1200  pounds,  with  indications  of  a  Clyde  ancestry. 
He  is  owned  by  Mr.  James  F.  AVier,  of  Somerville,  and  driven  by 
Frederick  E.  Wier.  This  is  a  remarkable  animal,  fat,  sleek,  practically 
sound,  and  showing  no  signs  of  great  age.  He  is  very  spirited,  and  when 
the  blue  ribbon  was  fastened  to  his  bridle,  he  alarmed  the  spectators  by 
jumping  off  at  a  gallop.  Mr.  Wier  has  owned  this  horse  twenty-one 
years,  and  he  is  still  at  work  hauling  potatoes  in  Somerville  and  Boston. 
Ned  will  appear  in  the  1906  Parade  in  the  class  for  "Provisions,  Light 
Horses." 

Other  prizes  in  this  class  were  given  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League, 
by  Mr.  W.  D.  Qiiimby,  and  by  the  Rev.  Reuben  Kidner. 

The  first  prize  in  the  second  division  of  the  Old  Horse  class,  a  silver 
medal,  offered  b}-  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  charitable  home  for  horses  at 
Stow,  was  won  in  1905  by  the  S.  S.  Pierce  Co.,  with  their  black  gelding 
Nigger  No.  2,  driven  by  Edward  Higgins. 

The  same  prizes,  given  b}'  nearly  the  same  donors,  with  the  addition 
of  two  prizes  given  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington,  are  offered  this  year, 
and  will  be  found  stated  below  at  the  head  of  the  entry  list. 


THE  LATE  R.   A.   LAWRENCE. 

Since  the  parade  of  1905,  the  Association  has  sustained  an  irrepar- 
able loss  in  the  death  of  Robert  Ashton  Lawrence,  its  first  president. 
Mr.  Lawrence  not  onh'  contributed  ver}-  largely  to  the  funds  of  the 
Association,  but  was  always  its  staunch  and  enthusiastic  supporter.  His 
warm  heart  and  manl}-  impulses,  his  readiness  to  assist  the  needy,  his 
sympathy  with  all  sorts  and  conditions  of  men,  his  modest}' and  simplicity 
endeared  him  to  his  associates.  From  childhood  he  had  shown  a  deep 
love  for  horses,  his  favorites  being  the  thoroughbred  and  the  cart-horse. 
In  early  life  he  took  some  part  in  amateur  races,  and  he  had  all  the 
instincts  of  the  genuine  sportsman  of  the  old  school,  being  wholly  free 
from  affectation,  courteous  and  quiet  in  manner,  but  punctilious  and 
dignified.  In  many  respects  he  recalled  the  men  of  a  generation  before 
the  Civil  War  when  Henry  and  Eclipse  ran  their  famous  four-mile  heats 
—  the  North  against  the  South  —  and  the  sporting  aristocracy  of  the 
whole  country  gathered  to  witness  the  event. 

Mr.  Lawrence  was  killed  b}'  a  fall,  while  attempting  to  board  a 
moving  train,  at  Chestnut  Hill,  near  his  home,  on  the  twenty-first  day  of 
September,  1905.     His  age  was  thirty-nine  years. 

Resolutions  upon  his  death  were  passed  by  the  directors  of  the 
Association,  who  attended  his  funeral  in  a  body. 

At  a  recent  meeting,  it  was  voted  to  give,  at  each  annual  parade 
hereafter,  a  gold  medal,  to  be  known  as  the  Lawrence  Medal,  which  shall 
be  the  principal  prize  offered  by  the  Association.  It  is  hoped  that  this 
medal,  and  his  generosity  to  the  Association  will,  for  many  years  to  come, 
preserve  the  memory  of  its  first  president  and  best  friend. 


The  Association  regrets  that  the  pressure  of  other  duties  compelled 
Mr.  C.  S.  Rackemann  and  Dr.  J.  W.  Bartol  to  resign  as  directors.  The 
places  on  the  board  thus  made  vacant  by  death  and  resignation  have  been 
filled  by  the  election  of  Lewis  A.  Armistead,  Francis  Peabody,  Jr.,  and 
Benjamin  W.  Wells,  Fire  Commissioner  of  the  City  of  Boston.  Dr. 
Austin  Peters,  the  first  and  faithful  Treasurer  of  the  Association,  re- 
signed that  post  in  January,  1905;  but  the  Directors  retain  the  benefit 
of  his  sagacity  and  experience,  for  he  continues  to  be  one  of  their 
number.  His  place  as  Treasurer  is  taken  b}'  Mr.  Joshua  Atwood,  3d, 
who,  from  the  beginning,  has  represented  on  the  board  the  city  govern- 
ment of  Boston. 


THE  OBJECT  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

The  object  of  the  Association  is  to  induce  owners  and  drivers  of 
work  horses  to  take  more  interest  in  their  welfare  and  more  pride  in  their 
appearance;  and  also  to  induce  the  public  generally  to  pay  some  atten- 
tion to  the  horses  daily  at  work  in  our  streets. 

The  horse  is  an  animal  that  by  his  physical  organization,  especially 
by  his  highly  developed  nervous  system,  is  peculiarly  capable  of  suffering. 
Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops  far  short  of  absolute  brutality,  keeps  him  in 
a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation.  Anyone  who  is  accustomed  to 
observe  horses  can  tell  by  a  single  glance  at  a  given  horse  whether  the 
driver  is  a  good,  bad  or  indifferent  one.  The  expression  of  the  animal's 
eye,  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears,  tell  the  story  unmistakably. 

Even  to  owners  who  have  no  feeling  for  horses  themselves  this 
matter  is  extremely  imp,ortant,  merely  from  the  money  point  of  view. 
The  difference  in  working  power  and  in  longevity  between  a  horse  well 
treated  and  well  driven  and  one  badly  treated  and  badly  driven,  is  far 
greater  than  would  be  supposed  by  those  who  have  not  actual  knowledge 
of  the  facts.  Hostlers  and  drivers  are  apt  to  take  their  cue  from  the 
employer;  and  the  example  set  them  is  often  a  bad  one.  What  kind  of 
service  can  be  expected,  for  example,  by  that  rich  Boston  Corporation 
which  recently  sold  at  auction  a  horse  that  it  had  owned  and  worked  for 
considerably  more  than  twenty  years! 

It  is  a  melancholy  fact  that  many,  perhaps  most  drivers,  take  little 
interest  in  the  horses  under  their  charge.  On  the  other  hand,  many  have 
a  positive  affection  for  their  horses,  and  show  the  greatest  pride  in  their 
good  appearance.  These  are  the  men  to  whom  the  daily  task  is  not  only 
a  means  of  livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of  happiness;  and  to  reward 
and  increase  this  class  is  the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work  Horse 
Parade  x\ssociation. 

THE  FUTURE  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

In  addition  to  holding  an  annual  parade,  the  Association  considers 
itself  at  libert3'to  use  its  funds  for  the  relief  of  work  horses  in  an}-  proper 
and  practicable  manner.  Especially  does  it  hope  to  procure  better 
watering  facilities  in  the  streets,  and  more  humane  pavements;  to  prevent 
the  use  of  horses  that  are  lame  or  otherwise  unfit  for  labor;  to  provide  or 
to  assist  others  in  providing  a  country  home  or  place  of  rest,  for  horses 
temporarily  disabled  or  exhausted. 


Reside  what  sums  arc  obtained  from  the  publication  of  advertise- 
ments in  the  catalogue,  the  Association  has  no  receipts  except  gifts.  The 
officers  render  their  services,  which  in  some  cases  are  arduous,  without 
any  compensation;  and  it  is  hoped  that  those  citizens  of  Boston  who  love 
horses,  and  v>  ho  derive  pleasure  or  proht  from  the  use  of  them,  will  con- 
tribute according  to  their  means. 


FOURTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1906. 


MONEY  PRIZES, 

jS  was  announced  some  months  ago,  money  prizes  will  be 
awarded  if  the  funds  in  the  treasury  are  sufficient  for  that 
purpose;  but  at  the  date  of  the  printing  of  this  catalogue  it 
seems  probable  that  the  funds  will  not  be  sufficient,  except 
of  course  in  the  case  of  the  special  prizes.  There  is  a  great 
increase  of  expenditure  this  year  on  account  of  the  additional 
ribbons  and  the  brass  medals  mentioned  below. 

RIBBONS  AND  MEDALS, 

In  the  parade  of  1906,  a  change  will  be  made  in  the  method  of 
awarding  the  ribbons,  and  every  entry  which  is  thought  worthy  of  being 
in  the  parade  will  receive  something.  The  horses  will  be  distributed  in 
classes,  as  in  previous  years,  according  to  the  business  in  which  the}'  are 
used,  and  the  only  competition  will  be  between  the  horses  in  each  class. 
In  each  class  so  man}'  ribbons  will  be  awarded  as  there  are  entries;  but 
these  ribbons  will  be  divided  into  four  grades,  equal,  or  nearly  equal  in 
number,  namely,  first,  second,  third  and  fourth.  Each  entry  in  a  class 
will  be  graded  and  assigned  to  the  first,  second,  third  or  fourth  grade,  and 
will  be  given  a  ribbon  accordingly:  blue  for  the  first,  red  for  the  second, 
yellow  for  the  third,  white  for  the  fourth.  These  ribbons  are  intended  to 
be  the  property  of  the  drivers. 

In  addition,  either  at  the  parade,  or  a  few  day's  later,  a  brass  medal, 
properly  marked,  will  be  given  to  each  winner  of  a  blue  ribbon.  These 
medals  are  intended  to  be  attached  to  the  harness  and  worn  every  day  as 
a  permanent  decoration;  and  it  is  believed  that  they  will  be  eagerly 
sought  and  highly  prized.  The  medal  will  belong  to  the  owner  of  the 
horse,  and  it  will  be  considered  a  breach  of  faith  if  he  attaches  a  medal 
to  any  horse  except  the  one  to  whom  it  was  awarded. 


METHOD   OF   JUDGING. 

So  far  as  possible  the  horses  arc  to  be  graded  accordingly  as  they 
excel  in  the  following  points: 

{a)  Good,  hard,  working  condition. 

(d)  Docile  and  gentle  manners,  showing  that  the}'  have  been  kindly 
treated  and  handled. 

ic)    Freedom  from  sores  or  galls. 

(d)  Age.  In  every  case,  other  things  being  equal,  the  older  horse  is 
to  be  set  above  a  3'ounger  horse.  Green,  soft  horses  are  to  be  discrimin- 
ated against,  and  to  receive  only  third  or  fourth  ribbons. 

{€)   Comfortable  harnessing. 

Collars  too  large  or  too  small,  throat-latches  too  tight,  and  inside 
reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs,  are  common  defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of 
it,  is  to  be  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  is  to  be  observed 
especially  in  respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is 
not  required.     The  value  or  newness  of  the  harness  does  not  count. 

The  vehicle  is  not  considered,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse,  or  horses,  drawing  it,  should  disqualify  the  entry. 

Color  is  not  considered  even  in  respect  to  matched  teams. 

If  two  horses,  or  two  teams  of  horses,  are  on  a  par  in  respect  to  con- 
dition, manners,  age  and  harnessing,  then,  as  between  them,  preference 
should  be  given  in  awarding  the  ribbon,  to  the  best  horse.  In  short,  the 
Judges  should  consider: 

First,  Condition  and  harnessing; 

Second,  Age; 

Third,  Attractiveness  and  value. 

N.  B.  No  ribbon  should  be  awarded  until  the  Judges  have  seen  the 
horses  move  at  a  trot,  or  in  case  of  the  heavy  horses,  at  a  walk  or  trot  as 
the  Judges  may  decide. 

It  is  the  duty  of  the  Judges  to  exclude  from  the  parade  any  horse 
that  is  thin,  lame,  sick,  out  of  condition,  dock-tailed,  or  in  any  way  unfit 
for  work. 

CERTIFICATES. 

In  addition  to  the  ribbons,  certificates  will  be  given  to  those  drivers 
whose  horses  appear  serviceably  sound  and  in  good  condition  and  spirits, 
provided  that  they  have  been  driven  continuously  by  the  same  driver  for  at 

10 


least  a  year  before  the  date  of  entry;  and  provided,  also,  that  a  certificate 
to  this  effect,  signed  by  the  owner,  was  filed  with  the  entry  blank. 

The  provision  as  to  the  length  of  time  during  which  the  horses  have 
been  dri\en  must  be  true  of  each  horse  in  the  team,  if  there  are  more 
than  one,  except  that  in  the  case  of  a  four-horse  team  it  will  be  sutficient 
if  three  of  the  horses  have  been  driven  by  the  driver  for  one  year. 

A  horse  shall  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  he  goes  sound  and 
breathes  sound. 

These  certificates  have  nothing  to  do  with  the  ribbons.  A 
horse  may  be  eligible  for  a  ribbon,  although  the  driver  is  not 
eligible  for  a  certificate. 

Certificates  are  not  awarded  where  owner  and  driver  are  one  and  the 
same  person. 

NOTICE  TO   SPECTATORS. 

In  many  cases  certain  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators 
at  the  reviewing  stand,  very  properl}'  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a 
ribbon  of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  review- 
ing stand  at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be 
disclosed,  whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses 
were  shown  to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or 
galls  under  the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  always  apparent, 
frequently  exclude  a  fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It 
should  be  remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of 
a  horse,  and  g-reen  horses  are  discriminated  asfainst. 

If  these  principles  upon  which  the  prizes  are  awarded  be  kept  in 
mind,  the  Association  believes  that  there  will  be  very  little  dissatisfaction 
with  the  decisions  of  the  Judges.  Increasing  care  has  been  taken  each 
year  in  the  selection  of  them,  and  the  Association  is  confident  that  its 
Judges  now  form  a  band  of  men  as  competent  and  impartial  as  could  be 
secured. 


11 


THE   HOME  OF 

"QUEEN  QUALITY" 


THE    PLANT    FACTORY    ALONE    NOW    PRODUCES    ONE-FOURTH 


AS  MUCH  SHOE  VALUE  AS  THE  ENTIRE  CITY  OF  BROCKTON, 
ONE-THIRD  AS  MUCH  AS  THE  CITY  OF  HAVERHILL,  AND 
ONE-FOURTH  AS  MUCH  AS  THE  CITY  OF  LYNN.  THE  THREE 
GREATEST  SHOE  PRODUCING  CITIES  IN  THE  WORLD.     ^    ^    ^ 

THOMAS    G.    PLANT    COMPANY 

Boston,  Massachusetts 


SOLD  IN  BOSTON  BY  JAMES  A.  HOUSTON 


^.mmmm^.^mm&^Mmmmmmm&&mmmmm&m^^.mmmm 


12 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS,    1906. 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society,  through  G.  T.  Angell, 
Esq.,  offers  a  siher  medal  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  has 
been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer, 
or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  In  addition,  the  Association  will 
give  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in  this  class  (the  prize  winner 
excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 

NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Length  of 
Service 
Years 

Cornelius  Corcoran 

Wm.  T.  &  A.  G.  Van  Nostrand 

44 

James  E.  King 

Wheeler  Estabrook  Co. 

37 

G.  M.  Barton 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

33 

Win.   Qijinn 

E.  S.  Morse 

32 

Solon  J.  Richardson 

City  Laundry  Co. 

32 

Frank  H.  Spinney 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

31 

Stephen  S.  Bangs 

Sanderson  Baking  Co. 

31 

Peter  F.  Dolan 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

27 

A.  A.  Berry 

S.  G.  Parker  Co. 

27 

Geo.  C.  Lien  hard 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

25 

John  Doherty 

E.  S.  Morse 

24 

Owen  J.  McNealy 

John  McNealy 

24 

Patrick  Gallagher 

Town  of  Brookline 

24 

Wm.  E.  Denvir 

C.  F.  Ilovey  ..^'  Co. 

23 

Michael  Griflin 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

23 

James  McLean 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

23 

Clarence  H.  Jones 

■ 

22 

Philip  Carey 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

22 

Williain  Cro\\ley 

William  Gilligan 

22 

William  F.  Meese 

L.  A.  Water  house 

21 

Charles  H.  Bissett 

R.J.  Elder 

21 

Chester  H.  Maddox 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

20 

P    J.  Coughlin 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

20 

Michael  Santry 

J.  T    Tighe  &  Co. 

20 

For  the  list  of  Judges,  for  the  names  of  contributors  and  advertisers,  and  for  other 
matter,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  entry  list. 

13 


@6S:@&sg&e@&&@e^&gri^ggeg:g':gg&gg:gg^g&§: 


Compliments  of 


I.  GOLDBERG 


A.  H.  RATHIV1AN 


GOLDBERG 


AND 


RATHMAN 


.  Dealers  in.. 


METALS    AND 
RUBBERS 


MANUFACTURERS     OF 

LEAD,   SOLDER, 
BABBIT 

AND 

TYPE     METALS. 


A    SPECIALTY 


CURED  AND  UNCURED 
RUBBER    SCRAP. 

GUTTA    PERCHA. 


289-293  Commercial   Street 


BOSTON,    MASS. 


Telephone,  Richmond  2023 


u 


CLASS  1— OLD  HORSES 

The  [prizes  in  this  class  will  he  awarded  to  the  horses  in  the  hest  condition,  age  and  length 
of  service  considered.  Horses  entered  in  this  class  are  not  eligible  for  any  other  class.  This  class 
is  not  open  to  horses  owned  by  cities  or  towns. 

DIVISION  A 

Horses  to  be  eligible  to  this  division  must  be  in  active  service,  and  must  have  been  owned  and 
used  by  the  person  making  the  entry,  (or  by  his  predecessor  in  the  business)  for  not  less  than  fifteen 
years  prior  to  the  entry. 

In  this  division  the  following  prizes  are  offered  :  First  Prize,  Gold  Medal  of  the  value  of 
$20.00,  by  the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  Animals,  through  G.  T.  Angell, 
Esq.;  Second  Prize,  $10.00,  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League;  Third  Prize,  $5.00,  by  Miss  Julia  H. 
Worthington  ;  Fourth  and  Fifth  Prizes,  $4.00  each,  offered  by  the  Association.  In  addition,  the 
Association  offers  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons,  with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  the 
Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 

These  special  prizes  go  to  the  owner:  but  the  Association  will  also  award  with  each  special 
prize,  a  ribbon,  to  be  the  property  of  the  driver. 


No. 

of 

Prize 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


City  of  Boston,  Fire  Department 

(Not  in  Competition) 

Boston  Elevated  Railwav  Co. 


C.  Brigham  Co. 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


James  McPiernan 
Chester  H    Maddox 

John  E    Willis 
William  L.  Garrity 
Charles  A.  Brown 


Horse's 
Name 


Fatty 
Darlins 

Deer 
Bill 
Billy 
Tom 


Horse's 
Age 


Length 

of 
Service 


15 


LONDON  MIXTURE 

Breakfast  Tea 


Better  than  Coffee 
Richer  than  Coffee 

Seven-Eighths    Coffee 


BUGLE 


Foster^s  g^^ji^g  Bottling 

Bass'  Ale 
Guinness'  Stout 


The    Largest    Bottlers   In   the   World   of 
BASS'   ALE 

The  Best  and  Most  Careful  Bottlers  of 
GUININESS'  STOUT 


S.  S.  Pierce  Co.,  Agts.  ...  boston 


16 


CLASS    I— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION   A— (Continued; 


No. 

of 

Prize 


No. 

of 

Entry 


26 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


David  D.  Burns 

A.  B.  Christie  &  Co. 

Winslow  H.  Dodge 

Martin  Godvin 

Frank  Learner 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

Peter  H.  McNealv 

E.  S.  Morse 
Matthew  E.  Nawn 
Joseph  M.  Nover 

C.  H.  Porter 

Stephen  J.  Quinn 

W.  W.  Robertson 

John  M.  Spear 

Stilhnan  Bottling  Co. 

Joseph  Thompson 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 
Whittemore-Woodbury  Co. 


David  D.  Burns 

James  Henry  Smith 
Herbert  Schoales 
Martin  L.  Godvin 

John  Dwyer 
Daniel  L.  Sullivan 

George  Hill 

T.  J.  Brennan 
Michael  Harkins 
Paul  Rupprecht 
Joseph  M.  Nover 
Wm.  Burkett 
Patrick  N.  O'Day 
W.  W.  Robertson 
Russell  B.  Spear 

Joseph  Rocco 
Joseph  Thompson 
Patrick  J.  Donovan 

James  Shea 
Waldron  Hamilton 
Jos.  Dumas 


Horse's 
Name. 

Horse's 
Age. 

Dick 

27 

Kitty 

30 

Dolly 

36 

Ned 

25 

Charlie 

34 

Mark 
Anthony 

26 

r  Billy 
\Kate 

20 
19 

Reuben 

19 

Maud 

17 

Fannie 

25 

Jack 

27 

Jack 

21 

Duke 

23 

Billie 

23 

Baby  Nell 

27 

Dan 

25 

Dick 

30 

Polly 

23 

Charlie 

21 

Major 

20 

Spider 

22 

17 


Atwood  ^™ 

McManus 

J* 

.•.  Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of  .-. 

WOODEN     BOXES 
PACKING..  CASES 


KINDLING  WOOD 


Tplpphnnp  Connection = 

FACTOKV  AND  OFFICE  : 

CARTER   vST.     and     FOURTH    ST. 
CHELSEA,  MASS. 


XTRAVIM  FEED  MOLASSES 

keeps  the  stock  in  a  healthy  condi- 
tion. It  helps  assimilate  other  foods, 
and  cures  indigestion.  It  produces 
a  glossy  coat  It  will  eradicate 
worms.  Ask  your  grocer  or  grain 
dealer  for  XTRAMM,  or  send  for 
information  and  valu- 
able book  on  the  dis-  ^^»  ''^«S'r, 
co\'ery  and  use  of  .^"^  —.=£~9  <f> 
molasses  as  applied  -''^'  ^ 
to  stock. 


:*'n>N.>v>' 


GET    THE    GENUINE 

Baker's 
Breakfast  Cocoa 


Registercil 
U.  S.  rat.  Office 


Made  by  a  scien- 
tific blending  of  the 
best  Cocoa  beans 
grown  in  different 
parts  of  the  world, 
— the  result  of  1 26 
years  of  successful 
endeavor. 
A  Perfect  Food. 

46  Highest  Awards 

In  Europe  and 

America. 


WoLlter  BoLker  (^  Co.  Ltd. 


Established  1780. 


DorcKester,  Ma.ss. 


Bay  State  Fuel 
Company 

A  Consolidation  o-f  the  old  Firm  of 
RICHARDSON  &  BACON 

WITH 

BAKER-HUNNEWELL    CO. 

COAL  AND  WOOD 

GENERAL  OFFICE  AND  WHARVES 

157  MAIN    STREET 
CAMBRIDGE 


Branch  Office  in  Boston, 

127  Cambridge  Street 

Branch  Offices  in  Cambridge 

624  Massachusetts  Avenue        .        Central  Street 
1336  Massachusetts  Avenue     .     Harvard  Square 


18 


OLD  HORSE  CLASS. 

DIVISION  B.— (Continoed.; 


No. 

of 

Prize 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 


James  McLean 
Walter  S.  Lockhart 


Horse's 
Name 


Lizzie 

/Jim 
iTom 


Horse's 
Age 


Length 

of 
Service 


No. 

of 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horse's 
Name. 

Horse's 
Age. 

Length 
Service 

27 

Boston  Tovve!  Supply  Co. 

Geo.  Irving  Smith 

Dolly 

20 

12 

2S 

W.  C.  Bray 

Nathan  P.  Teague 

Peggy 

20 

14 

29 

Creamer-Wing  Laundry  Co. 

L.  D.  Abbott 

Topsy 

19 

14 

30 

" 

Asa  H.  West 

Old  Gray 

19 

13 

31 

George  W.  Epps 

George  W.  Epps 

Major 

19 

II 

32 

C.  F.  Hovey&Co. 

George  C.  Lienhard 

Major 

18 

12 

33 

Walter  P.  Jones 

William  J.  Berigan 

Paddy 

24 

14 

34 

Isaac  Locke  &  Co. 

Frank  Marston 

Joe 

15 

ID 

35 

Maiden  Electric  Light  Co. 

John  W.  Silliker 

Robin 

19 

II 

36 

Munroe  &  Arnold-Merritt 
Express  Co. 

Richard  F.  Murphy 

f  Major 
iKate 

16 
16 

II 
II 

36a 

Elmer  Oakman 

Patrick  Flaherty 

Simeon 

20 

12 

19 


Atwood  '"'' 

McManus 

.•.  Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of  .-. 

WOODEN     BOXES 

Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes 

LOOK  for  the 

THREE  HORSE  HEAD  TRADE-MARK 


When  buying   Hack  Robes  look 
for  the  word  "CHASE" 


XTRAVIM  FEED  MOLASSES     I 


CHARLESTOWN,  MASS. 


SPECIALTIES 

Mother^s    Bread    and    Fox's   Pies 


Telephone,  209  Roxbury 

WILLIAM  GILLIGAH 

..General.. 
Contractor 


H.P.Hood&Son 

MILK 

AND 


CREAM 


WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL 


DEALER  IN 


SAND  AND  GRAVEL 


494  Rutherford  A\'e.,  Charlestown, 
193  Alley  Street,  Lynn, 
105  Holmes  Ave.,  Dorchester. 


TEAMING  AND  EXCAVATING 


Office,  28  Mechanic   St. 


Hood  Farm  Milk  was  awarded  a  diploma  for 
excellence  of  Qiialitj  at  the  milk  scoring 
contest,  held  under  the  direction  of  the 
United  States  Dei)artment  of  Agricultui"e  at 
Chicago,   Feb.   16,   1906. 


20 


OLD  HORSE  CLASS» 

DIVISION  B.— (Continued.) 


No. 

of 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Length 

of 
Service 

37 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

James  McLean 

Lizzie 

17 

II 

38 

i'           t(         11 

Walter  S.  Lockhart 

i,  lom 

19 
19 

13 
13 

39 

Sanderson  Baking  Co. 

Stephen   S.  Bangs 

Prince 

40 

Albert  A.  Smitii 

Steve  Fallon 

Daisy 

20 

H 

41 

James  T.TigheCo. 

Patrick  Crowley 

Joe 

21 

14 

42 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Edward  S.  Ames 

Jack 

17 

13 

43 

>. 

Frank  Fitzgerald 

Jack 

17 

13 

44 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Caleb  Caswell 

Jerry 

17 

10 

45 

.. 

George  Brown 

Put 

16 

10 

46 

" 

Sumner  Starbird 

Ben 

15 

10 

47 

'• 

Thomas  P.  Wallace 

Peter 

17 

'' 

2i 


J.  S.  BILLIARD*  SOB 


Established   1861 


Truckmen 


Forwarders 


20     INDIA     STREET 


BOSTON 


JOY  LINE 


NEW    YORK 


All  the  Tvay  by    U'alcr" 


REDUCED  RATES 

SERVICE  UNEXCELLED 

Lowest   Freight  Rates 

TRLWEEKLY   SAILINGS 


For  Rates  and  Information  Address 
W.  E.   STORER,   Gen.   Freight  Agent 
B.   D.  PITTS,         .          .         .         Agent 

308  Congress  Street 
Boston 


R.  A.  Kennett 


C 


fi 


TRUCKMAN 


.and. 


FORWARDER 


m 


5  NORTH   MARKET  ST.,  BOSTON 

Telephone,  78  Richmond 


"  Name  on  Every  Piece  " 

JOY/KEfS 

Chocolate  Bonbons 

ONE  BOX  WILL  MAKE 
A  HAPPY  HOME 

Take  one  Home  to-day 

RETAIL    STORE 

416    Washington     Street 


BONBONS 


ICES 


SODA 


22 


CLASS  2  — FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 

In  this  Chiss  the  Judges   may   award   Ribbons  as   follows:  —  ist,   2d,  3d,   4th,  and  Two  Highly 
Commended  Ribbons. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry. 

OWNER'S   NAME. 

DRIVER'S  NAME. 

No. 

of 

Horses 

48 

Boston  Fire  Department 

W.  F.  McCorkle 

3 

49 

" 

T.  J.  Kennealey 

2 

50 

" 

\V.  F.  Connell 

2 

51 

Boston  Protective  Department 

Jas.  Jos.  Curry 

2 

52 

City  of  Chelsea 

Frank  H.  Chicken 

2 

5.3 

City  of  Somervill© 

Henry  J.  Turner 

2 

CLASS  3.  — POLICE  DEPARTMENTS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  : —  ist,  2d,  and  3d. 


54 

City  of  Boston 

Jewett  Farnham 

I 

55 

" 

Elmer  W.  Jones 

I 

56 

" 

John  F.  Chase 

2 

23 


Metropolitan  Coal  Company 


GENERAL  OFFICES 


30  Congress  Street,  Boston 

COAL 


ANTHRACITE      I       ■      I  /A    I    .      BITUMINOUS 


For  all  Steam  and  Domestic  Purposes 


Wa 


BRANCH  OFFICES  IN  ALL  SECTIONS  OF  THE  CITY  AND  SUBURBS 

TELEPHONE,    MAIN    4640 

C   R   HOVEY   &  CO. 

IMPORTERS  AND  RETAILERS  OF 

DRY    GOODS 


Sole   Agents    for    Boston    for   the  Celebrated 

Alexandre  Kid  Gloves 

MEDALS    AWARDED    THE    MANUFACTURERS    AT 
EVERY   WORLD'S    FAIR 

3  3  Summer  St      .'.      42  Avon  St.,  Boston 

24 


CLASS  4  — CITIES  AND  TOWNS  —  Park  Department 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  —  Two  ists  ;   one  2d  ;   one  3d  ;   one  4th. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

57 

City  of  Boston 

Fred  A.  Plyer 

I 

ss 

u 

John  Coughlin 

I 

59 

" 

Thomas  H .  Mulvey 

2 

60 

c< 

John  Morrissey 

2 

61 

" 

Thomas  Connell 

2 

CLASS  5  —  CITIES  AND  TOWNS  —  Street  and  Sanitary  Departments 


In    this   Class   the  Judges    may   award  ribbons 
three  4ths. 


as   follows:    Five   ists ;  three  2ds ;    three    3dg 


62 

Met 

■opol 

tan  Water  and   Sewerage  Board 

63 

City  of  Boston 

64 

" 

65 

>. 

66 

" 

67 

.. 

68 

I'own  of  Brookline 

69 

" 

70 

" 

71 

"- 

72 

" 

73 

City  of  Boston 

74 

" 

75 

"              " 

Thomas  Walley 

Michael  J.  Maguire 

Eugene  McCauley 

Jeremiah  Collins 

John  Lynch 

John  Doherty 

Patrick  Gallagher 

James  P.  Lacey 

James  W.  Summers 

Patrick  F.  Russell 

Thomas  E.  Sullivan 

Samuel  Blair 

John  Con  Ian 

John  L.  Sullivan 


25 


EUGENE  S.  MORSE      J.  D.  Packard  &  Sons 


Dealer  in 


COAL 


* 


199  MEDFORD  ST.,   .'.   BOSTON 

Opposite  Everett  Street 

Telephone, 

Charlestown  136  Charlestown  District 


Established  1850 


SHATTUCK  &  JONES 


..TELEPHONE.. 

128  Faneuil  Hall  Market 


Dealers  in  FltSt  OuaUtj 

CARRIAGE  HORSES 

.  •  .    EXCLUSIVELY     .  •  . 


High-class  Saddle  and  Harness  Horses,  carefully 

selected,  thoroughly  acclimated,  perfectly 

mannered,  and  ready  for  immediate  city  use. 

Telephone^  226   Haymarket 

Xh,  CHARDON  STREET      -     -      BOSTON 
BRIGHTON  AVENUE  -     -         ALLSTON 


Established  1841 

W.  P.  STONE  &  CO, 

Manufacturers  of 

Wagons,  Caravans  and 
=^^  Sleds  ^^^ 

CARRIAGE  PAINTING 
REPAIRING  IN  ALL   BRANCHES 

ITS  and  179  West  First  St. 

SOUTH  BOSTON 


26 


CLASS  6  — BARREL  RACKS 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbon  as  is  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

76 

Geo.  L.  Elliot  Barrel  Co. 

Archibald  Calhoun 

I 

CLASS  7  — HUCKSTERS 

In  this   Class  the  Judges    may   award  ribbons   as  follows;     Three   ist;    Two  2ds  ;     Two  3ds  ; 
Two  4ths. 


William  G.  Burrows 


John  Leo  Duffley 
Albert  Christian  Paul 
Robert  C.  Iluddy 
Mrs.  E.  A.  Janse 
James  H.  Nolan 
Mark  Simonds 


William  J.  Burrows 

Louie  Dress 

Mike  Coakley 

Geo.  A.  Duffley 

James  Henry  Maher 

Arthur  O'Neil 

John  A.  Janse 

James  H.  Nolan 

Mark  Simonds 


27 


D.  WHITING  k  SONS 

Wholesale  and   Retail 

and  Cream  Dealers 

AxD  Proprietors  of 

WHITING  W  CREAMERY 

BUTTER 


S56    Rutherford    Ave., 

Telephone  Nos.  245  and  246  Charlestown 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


Established  1855 


Telephone,  739  Oxford 


WHIPPLE  &  COMPANY 


H.   M.   PUTNEY 


TRUCKMEN 


OFFICE: 


166  Essex  Street,  Boston 


^ 


Corner  Lincoln  and  Tufts  Sts. 
Corner  Pearl  and  Purchase  Sts. 
STANDS  (  69  Chauncy  Street 
Milton  Place 
81  Franklin  Street 


^mmmmm-^.^.^.mmmmmm 


John  M.  Woods  Charles  H.  Sherbukni 

E.  D.  Walker  W.  E.  Chamberlain 


John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 


Wholesale 


Retail 


,  P,  illTElRE 

l)av  and  Grain 


AIR  DRIED  AND  KILN  DRIED 


^mm^.^.^.mmmm^^.mmm 


SPECIALTIES: 

MAHOGANY  WHITEWOOD 

QR.  SYCAMORE  CHERRY 

OAK  ASH  WALNUT 


223  to  239  Bridge  Street, 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 
Telephone,     Cambridae     1430 


28 


CLASS  8  — LAUNDRIES 


In  this  Class   the  Judges  may  award  ribbons   as  follows:  —  Nine   ists;   Eight  2ds  ;   Seven  3ds  : 
Eight  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


86 

87 
88 
89 
90 
91 
92 
93 
94 
9.S 
96 

97 

98 

99 
100 

lOI 

102 
103 
104 
105 
1 06 
107 
108 
109 
\  no 
III 

112 

"3 

114 

115 
116 

117 


Citj  Laundry  Co 


Creamer-Wing  Laundry  Co. 


Eaton  Towel  Supply 
Excelsior  Laundry  Co. 


Foster-Currier  Laundry  Co. 


Daniel  J.  Keleher 
Metropolitan  Laundry 


Frank  H.  Ames 
Walter  P.  Gardner 

Henry  Barnard 

Wm.  H.  Paterson 

Solon  J.  Richardson 

Norman  Sias 

James  O'Brien 

John  D.  MacKay 

Walter  C.  Wood 

Daniel  MacLeod 

Frank  H.  Spinney 

O.  P.  Creamer 

P.  J.  Coughlin 

George  M.  Barton 

T.  J.  Cronin 

George  Betts 

Wm.  G^uinn 

Arthur  Warren 

John  Mcintosh 

L.  A.  Fiske 

J.  II.  Bryer 

Thomas   L.  Finn 

Joseph  E.  Studley 

Thos.  F.  Reardon 

Fred  W.  Gardner 

John  R.  Crowell 

Alfred  B.  Hovey 

Daniel  J.  Riley 

Frank  E. Jepson 

Wilfred  L.  Philie 

Wm.  W.  Sibley 

George  F.  Monique 


29 


Henry  Siegel  Company 

WASHINGTON  AND  ESSEX  STREETS 


c3^ 


Men's  Clothing  Department 


3rd  Floor 


MOST  COMPLETE  STOCKS  IN  BOSTON 


McCALL.  the  HARNESS  MAN  p    t      k  p 


353  RUTHERFORD  AVE. 

Sec  our  Stock. 


Get  our  Prices 


(Incorporated) 
STOW,  MASS.         Station,  South  Acton 


Humane  Home 
for  Abused  and  Injured  Horses 


Old  Favorites  pensioned  for  Life 


Country  rest  for  city  working  Horses 


Custom  -  Made  Collars,  Wood -Tree 
Saddles  and  Hand -Made   Harness 

A    SPECIALTY 


Established  1868. 


Tel.  384  Charlestown. 


Worn-out   and   aged   horses  rescued   from 
cheap  Sales  Stables  and  Junk  Wagons 


^ 


Supported  by  Contributions.    P.O.  Box 400,  STO  W 


30 


CLASS  9  — DELIVERY  — Miscellaneous 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  mux  award  ribbons  as  follows  :— Four  ist ;  Three  2d  ;  Three  3d  ;  Three 4th 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 
of 

Entry 


119 
120 
121 

i2ia 

122 
123 

124 

126 
127 
128 
129 


OWNER'S   NAME 


Michael  J.  Coughlin 

CM.  Man  dell  &  Co. 

J.  W.  McEnany 

Mossman  Brothers 

Samuel  F.  Wadsworth,  M.  D.  V. 

Wheeler-Estabrook  Co. 

Wilson,  Tisdale  Co. 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


Michael  J.  Coughlin 

John  M.  Gildred 

Joseph  A.  McDonald 

E.  W.  Mossman 

Harry  Boone 

James  E.  King 

Michael  J.  Shea 

James   O'Connor 

Cornelius  Curtin 

James  Sullivan 

John  Daly 

Timothy  J.  O'Connor 

Harry  Cannon 


31 


Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

The   Mercantile   Heart   of   New   Eng-land 


HEADQUARTERS    FOR  =- 


Horse  Clothing,  Whips,  Crops 

CARRIAGE  and  AUTO  ROBES 


Our  Standard  Always  the  Highest       /.      Our  Prices  Absolutely  the  Lowest 
Our  Stock  Always  the  Largest 


CREAMER-WING 
Laundry  Company 


c^^ 


59  WEST   NEWTON    STREET 

Telephone,  Tremont  108 


Boston  Suburban  Express 
and  Parcel  Co. 

Packages  collected  and  delivered  in  all 
parts  of 

BOSTON 


ARLINGTON 

AUBURNDALE 

BROOKLINE 

CAMBRIDGE 

CHELSEA 

DORCHESTER 

EAST  BOSTON 

MALDEN 


MEDFORD 
NEWTON 
NEWTON  CENTRE 
NO.  CAMBRIDGE 
SOMERVILLE 
WEST  NEWTON 
WEST  ROXBURY 
WINTHROP 


Write,  Call  or  'Phone  Main  5200 
Express  Telephone  Service 


50-60  Batterymarch  St. 


85-87  Broad  St. 


32 


CLASS    10—  DELIVERY—  Department  Stores 


In  this  Class    the  Judges    may   award    ribbons    as   follows 
Five  4ths. 


■Seven    ists  ;  Six  2ds;   Five  3ds 


No. 

of    ! 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry. 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

130 

C.  F.  Hovej  &  Co. 

James  H.  Padden 

131 

" 

John  J.  Dwyer, 

132 

•' 

Wm.  II.  Hogan 

133 

Wm.  E.  Denvir 

134 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

Albert  Daley 

^35 

.. 

John  Murray 

136 

'• 

Frank  Wells 

137 

•'          '• 

Andrew  J.  Coyle 

13S 

.. 

John  Ryan 

139 

Daniel  Moylan 

140 

James  Hagerty 

141 

..          .. 

John  A.  Coyne 

H- 

Thomas  Lonergan 

143 

Henry  Siegel  Co. 

John  Wilson 

144 

" 

Thomas  Barrett 

145 

Joseph  McQiiaid 

146 

.. 

John  G.  Mayer 

147 

" 

John  Regan 

.4S 

.,    -      ..         ,. 

John  Adams 

149 

John  J.  McCarthy 

150 

'•.        '• 

William  Rogers 

151 

..         .. 

Frank  Clark 

152 

Joseph  G.  Irons 

33 


C^M^KENNEY&^VArEKBURY  (bMPANY, 


^V^ii 


£LECIRIC.GAS<zn£OlI,      "- 


HILL  &  HILL 

Makers     of 

HARNESS 

Horse  and  Stable  Furnishings 

Harness  Makers'  Supplies 
QUALITY VARIETY  —  VALUE 


W.  J.  HIQQINS 

flmportcrs  an^ 
.  .  (Broccrs  .  . 

128-134  Emerson  Street 

SOUTH   BOSTON 


i^^S^^S^  &&&  t&S- S-S^S- tS^^S^  &S^  S^  S^  S^  &S^^&  5^  £-5-5- &&&^ 

Telephone,   Dorchester  796-1 

Dorchester  Ice  Company 

DORCHESTER 

fe^Si  feSiS  &&i-  &S^&  &S-S-  &S^i-  &&S;fe&&&&&&S^^Si 


F.  G.  ALLNUTT 


Dealer  In 


lI>ro\>i6ion6 

Fish  and  Oysters   Pruit  and  Vegetables 

.  .  .  Agent   for  .  .  . 

IkatabMn  Sprincj  m^tcv 
6  Boylston  St.,  Cambridge 

TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


31 


CLASS   U— EXPRESS 

111  tliis  Class  the  Jiuiges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows: — Seven  ists;  Eight  2ds  :  Five  3ds  ; 
Five  4ths. 

In  addition  a  prize  of  $10.00  is  offered  in  this  Class  by  Mrs.  James  L.  Russell.  This ^ prize  is  not 
to  be  awarded  to  a  young  horse 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


'54 
155 
156 
157 
158 
159 
160 
161 
162 
163 
164 
165 
166 
C67 
16S 
169 


173 
174 
175 
176 

177 


Jacob  Bierweiler 
Boston  Suburban  Expi-ess  Co. 


Carter  Russell  &  Co. 
W.  H.  Dodge 

Joseph  L.  Fisher 
W.  B.  Howard 


William  A.  Keen 
Munroe  &  Arnold-Merritt  Express  Co. 

North  Shore  Express  Co. 

Frederick  W.  Pavitt 

C.  G.  Parmenter 

M.  J.  Shuckrowe 
II.  M.  Thurston 


Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

Frank  Ryan 

George  E.  Thing 

John  McGuiness 

Henry  Stevens 

C.  F.  Hopkins 

George  Moore 

Charles  Lasker 

George  F.  Callaghan 

Herbert  G.  Johnson 

Louis  Finmara 

Edgar  L.  Hezlitt 

Arthur  S.  Homer 

William  N.  Howard 

Frank  McManus 

Robert  Clements 

William  O.  Seaward 

A.  J. Jarvis 
Freeman  J.  Wagner 

H.  Gray 

Frederick  W.  Pavitt 

Henry  F.  O'Brien 

Frederick  F.  Dolaher 

M.  J    Shuckrowe 

Richard  O'Brien 


35 


J.  T.  TiGHE  Company 

BEST  GRADES 

Sargent  &  Ham  Co. 

H.  SARGENT          A.   1'.  11AM           A.  A.  SAKGE.NT 

Family  and   COAL 
...Steam   ^^^^^i- 

LOWBST     CASH      PRICES 

Telephone,  156  South  Boston 

Cacriages 

Highest  Award  at  Centennial  Exposition,  1876 

26  28  and  30  BOWKER  STREET 

WHARF,  First  Street,  loot  01  tr     „„,,-„  nno-rnu 
VAPn,  :i.i  WP«t  Hmirth  Street     ^"U'"  0"^'"" 

BOSTON 

D.  S.  Woodberry 

¥¥¥ 

TRUCKMAN 

3(0  ATLANTIC  AVENUE,  BOSTON 

A.  F.  WHITE,  V.S. 

SPECIALIST  IN  DISEASES  OF 
THE  FEET  AND    LIMBS,  AND 

Expert  Horse  Shoer 

Personal  attention  given  to  Shoeing 

All  shoes  fitted  cold. 

Horses  called  for  and  returned. 

Telephone,  Richmond  1055-2           Hospital  and  Forge 

116  WASHINGTON  ST.,  North 

NeiLi- C;iu.sew:i_v.  Boston,  Mass. 

W. H. YOULDEN 


J.  H.  SMITH 


T.  G.  HOPKINS 


Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

MOVERS  OF 

Safes  and  Machinery 

Teaming  of  all  Kinds  Rigging  Work  a  Specialty 

OFFICE  STAND 

571  Atlantic  Avenue        48  Sudbury  Street 

Basement 
TELEPHONES: 
134  Main  1740  Main  1150  Haymarket. 

36 


CLASS  J  2  — MILK   DEALERS 

In   this   Class   the  Judges  mav   award  ribbons  as  follows:    Ten    ists;    Eight  2ds  ;    Eight  3ds 
Eight  4th s. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No 

of 

Horses 


17s 
179 
180 
181 
182 
183 
184 
185 
186 
1S7 

iSS 

1 89 
190 

191 
192 

193 
194 

'9.S 


C.  Brigham  Co. 


Elm  Farm  Milk  Co 


C.  Scale 

William  G.  Irving 

George  N.  Swimmer 

H.  G.  Ingram 

Anthony  Wachendorf 

Alexander  McLean 

Eli  B.   Dinsmorc 

Robert  E.  Colter 

Harry  Collins 

Howard  White 

Nicholas  J.  Leonard 

Joseph  Breen 

Clarence  Nelson 

James  Phelan 

James  A.  Brackett 

Elmer  E.  Morse 

Alvin  L.  Moses 

Albert  L.  Rider 


37 


I.     S       N  E  WCO  f 


G.     M.     D.     LEGG 


J.  S.  NEWCOMB  &  CO. 

WHOLESALE    AM)    RETAIL 
DEALEKS    IN 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal 

AND  POULTRY 


M.    DOHERTY 


Basement,  4  Quincy  Market,    -    Boston,  Mass. 

TELEPHONE,  RICHMOND  220 


MICHAEL  DOHERTY  &  CO. 

Importers   and 

mbole$ak«  Ciquor «  Dealers 

Sole  Importeis  and  Proprietors  of  the 
CELEBRATED  BRANDS     

Royal    Dutch   Gin,    Imperial    Cognac    Brandy 
and  Golden  Sheaf  Rye  Whiskey 


184  to  192  Kneeland  Street    ) 
765  to  771  Atlantic  Avenue     j 


BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


L.  Speidel^Co 

PABST 

■K/f  :i         1        Beer 


telephone  1237-4  Richmond 

W.  B.  HOWARD^S 

Back  Bay,  South  (§^  West  End 

EXPRESS 

Stand,  14  Dock  Square,  Boston 


^fc^^^  &^^ &&& &&&  &S^^&  &&S^  t^S^  t&S^  ^^^  &^^  fe&S^  &&&&&>  &&S^  &&S^  &&&  &&S^  &^&  SrirSr  &^&^^ 


AIR  CUSHION 

No  Lameness 


They  fill  with  air  at  each  step. 
That's  what  breaks  concussion. 
That's  what  prevents  slipping. 
That's  what  keeps  the  foot  healthy. 
That's  what  cures  lameness. 


No  Slipping 


SEE  THAT  CUSHION? 


Order  through  your  horse-shoer 

Revere    Rubber    Co. 


RUBBER 

HORSE= 

SHOE 


PADS 


SOLE     MANUFACTURERS 

Boiston  INevv  York 


Order   by   "INAME 


No. 

of 
Ribbon 


No, 
of 

Entry 


196 

197 
198 
199 
200 
201 
202 
203 
204 
205 
206 
207 


CLASS   12  — MILK  DEALERS 

(Continued) 


OWNER'S    NAME 


H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 


George  II.  Noone 
D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Frederick  E.  Weir 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


B.  A.  Chute 

Daniel  E.  Warner 

William  I.  McCullough 

George  W.  Dee 

Charles  W.  Barker 

D.  W.  Gates 

Michael  Sweeney 

Irving  N.  Perry 

J.  H.  Brown 

James  Grant 

Harmon  F.  Noone 

Frank  Wolf 

Frederick  E.  Weir 


CLASS    14  — PROVISIONS  — Heavy  Horses 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Five  ists;  Five  2ds;  Three  3ds;  Three  4ths. 


230 

Geo.  W.  Epps 

Chas.   S.  Rice 

I 

231 

J.  F.  Heald 

John  H.  Logan 

I 

232 

,  J.  F.  Ileaid 

Patrick  J.  Rutledge 

I 

233 

Joseph  P.  McCarthy 

Percy  W.  Curran 

I 

234 

" 

Joseph  M.  McAllister 

I 

23^ 

.. 

Geo.  P.  Nowlin 

2 

236 

" 

Bernard  J.  Hampe 

2 

237 

J.  G.  Miller  Co. 

Efstathios  Androotsos 

I 

23S 

Lewis  E.  Murphy 

Frederic  De  Courcey 

2 

239 

Alfred  Sears  &  Co. 

Wm.  R.  Moses 

I 

240 

" 

Wm.  H.  Sears 

I 

241 

" 

John  J.  Leslie 

I 

242 

J.  G.  Walker  .*c  Son 

Albert  M.  Ashland 

I 

243 

" 

John  A.  Brander 

2 

244 

Fred  J.  Walker 

Albert  F.  Taylor 

I 

245 

it          " 

Fred  A.  Taylor 

2 

41 


John  T.  Scully  &  Brother       w.  M.  robinson    | 


COINTRACTORS 
^TEAMSTERS^ 
PILE    DRIVERS 


Boston 


Cambridge 


Hay,  Grain 
and  Poultry  Food 


ADAMS    AND    PARK   STREETS 

DORCHESTER 


Compliments  of , 


Porter's  ^larket 


151  Summer  St.,  Boston 


Tel.  Cam.  «5 


Business  Est.  1867 


PROCTOR  BROTHERS 

Wholesale  and  Retail 

Grain,  Hay,  Straw -"Feed 

CRAIGIE'S  BRIDGE,  EAST  CAMBRIDGE 


..Importers  of  Peat  Moss.. 

GEO.  O.  PROCTOR,  Prop.  E.  R.  LOVELL,  Mgr. 


^fc  t&&  &^^  &&&  Sr^^  &&&&&&  ts^^s^  &&s^  &^^  &*&  t&s^  &s^s^  ts^^s-  ^^^  ^^^  ^^^  &&s^  t^s^  ^s^*  &^&^^ 

'' RUBBER         f-^     A      r^r^        <fy 

"S5SI    PADS  • 


AIR  CUSHION 


No  Lameness 


They  fill  with  air  at  each  step. 
That's  what  breaks  concussion. 
That's  what  prevents  slipping. 
That's  what  keeps  the  foot  healthy. 
That's  what  cures  lameness. 


No  Slipping 


SEE  THAT  CUSHION? 


»*'  Order  through  vour  horse=shoer 

t   Revere    Rubber    Co. 


SOLE     MANUFACTURERS 

Boston  New  York 


Order   by   "MAMI 


"^^S^^^^^vj^^^^^-S^^^^^^^^HJ^^^^^S^S^^J^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^S^^^ 


38 


CLASS   13  — PRO  VISIONS —  Light  Horses 

In  this  Class  the  Judii^es  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  F'ive  isls;  Four  2ds  :  Four  3ds  ;  Five  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

212 

Frederick  G.  Allnutt 

Wm.  E.  Francis 

213 

C.  S.  &  C.  H.  Dempsey 

Robert   Cameron 

214 

" 

Thomas  Axon 

215 

L.  M.  Dyer  cV  Co.,  Inc. 

Manuel  Strauss 

216 

J.  F.  Ileald 

Thomas  P.  Carroll 

217 

J.  F.  Heald 

Walter  F.Johnson 

218 

J    S.  Newcomb  &  Co. 

Frank  H.  Freeman 

219 

C.  II.  Porter 

Harry  Grouse 

220 

.< 

Peter  Metroni 

221 

.. 

Albert  Cox 

222 

Shattuck  c^'  Jones 

G.   Fred  Seamon 

223 

<< 

John  F.  Bradshaw 

224 

"                " 

Norris  Currier 

225 

Albert  A.  Smith 

John  J.  Hughes 

226 

" 

Frank  Darling 

227 

i, 

Leonard  J.  Bartel 

22S 

" 

Joseph  F.  Heinlein 

229 

1                        Frederick  E.  Weir 

Frederick  E.  Weir 

1 

CLASS    1 4  —  PROVISIONS  —  Heavy  Horses 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Five  ists;  Five  2ds;  Three  3ds;  Three  4ths. 


230 

Geo.  W.  Epps 

Chas.  S.  Rice 

231 

J.   F.  Heald 

John  H.  Logan 

232 

.  J.  F.  Heald 

Patrick  J.  Rutledge 

233 

Joseph  P.  McCarthy 

Percy  W.  Curran 

234 

" 

Joseph  M.  McAllister 

23  s 

" 

Geo.  P.  Nowlin 

236 

" 

Bernard  J.  Hampe 

237 

J.  G.  Miller  Co. 

Efstathios  Androotsos 

238 

Lewis  E.  Murphy 

Frederic  Ue  Courcej- 

239 

Alfred  Sears  &  Co. 

Wm.  R.  Moses 

240 

" 

Wm.  H.  Sears 

241 

.. 

John  J.  Leslie 

242 

J.  G.  Walker  .V  Son 

Albert  M.  Ashland 

243 

.; 

John  A.  Brander 

244 

Fred  J.  Walker 

Albert  F.  Taylor 

24.=; 

"          " 

Fred  A.  Taylor 

41 


^s-fr  ^^S'  &&fr  6&&  &&£-  &e-s-  ^s^^s-  ^s-s^^^s^s-s-s-Sr 


Cotnplhnerits  of- 


Bunker  Hill  Carriage 
—  Company    — = 


^ 


g-g^fr  e-&^g-  g^S^g-  feS-.gr  e;&^  gjg;^  g^s-g-  g;SiS-  ^^^  &g;& 


M.  FREDI4M  &  SONS 

\Vliolcs;ile  Dealers  in 

Fine  Confectionery 


AND    SALTED   NUTS 


2200  Washington  St.,  Roxbury 


Compliments    of 

J.  H.   RICHARDSON 

COSMOPOLITAN   BOARDING 

AND    

BAITING   STABLE 

Corner  Pitts  and  South  Margin  Streets 

Boston,  IMass. 

STOCK   FARM.  ANDOVER,  MASS 


Compliments    of 

LONDON  HARNESS  COMPANY 

JOHN   HANCOCK  BUILDING 

176  Devonshire  and  27  to  29  Federal  Streets 


eeg^g-'S^ggg^g^i^gg&sggfg^^^i^g^s&i^g^i^i^^©^ 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 


R.  H.  WHITE  CO. 


g§^©@g^§T§^^&g^i^&§^^§^@§^§^i^§^^@g^&^§^@§^^&:g^§^@ 


42 


CLASS    15  — BAKERS— Singles 


In  this  Class  the  Judges   may   award   Ribbons  as   follows 
Seven  4ths. 


Xinc    ists;   Seven  2ds  ;    Six  3ds  ; 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

246 

F.  H.  Blewett 

247 

Ilcnry  Blewett 

24S 

" 

249 

"             " 

250 

J-G 

.  &  B.  S.  Ferguson  Co. 

251 

•' 

252 

"                      " 

253 

" 

254 

" 

255 

.. 

256 

George  G.  Fox  Co. 

257 

.. 

258 

.. 

259 

" 

260 

.< 

261 

< 

262 

.< 

263 

.. 

DRIVER'S    NAME 


Cyrus  Gaudet 
Cyrus  Des  Roches 

Phillip  Perry 
Dana  E.  Higgins 
James  A.  Cronk 

David  Smith 

Edward  Kenfield 

Robert  Wallace 

Ernest  Williamson 

Ephriam  Achorn 

Louis  E.  Bishop 

R.  D.  Palmer 

F.  F.  Gill 

T.  Why  not 

W.J.  Ralston 

H.  M. Johnson 

James  J.  Welch 

F.  H.  Gallant 


of 
Horses 


43 


Charles  Van  Buskirk  &  Son 


.M:inufacturcis    of 


CARAVANS  and  WAGONS 

T.h/'lioue  Coiiufcti.tn 

141-149  FIRST  ST.,  EAST  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 


'lelcijlioiic,  Ihiymatket  No.  491  and  492 

C.  BERRY  &  CO. 

Importers  and  Wholesale 
Deakrs  in 

Wines  and  Liquors 

BOTTLERS  OF 

Lager,  Ale  and  Porter 

Proprietors  of  Berry's  Diamond  Wedding  Rye  and  Bourbon  Vl(hiii<ey 

84  to  88  Leverett  St.,  and  2  to  8  Ashland  St. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


MILL  OFFICE  ELEVATOR  AND  MILL 

Telephone  483  Roxbury  200  Norfolk  Avenue 


Carleton  Keyes 


A,  W.  Herrick 


Everything  for  the  Office  and  Desk 


EDWIN  D.  DODGE 

The  Dudley  Feed  Mills 

Flour,  Grain,  Hay  and  Feed 

CONTENTS  OF  VAULTS  AND  CESSPOOLS 


THE 

STATIONER' 

5  MILK  STREET 
BOSTON 


Roxbury  District    .-.    Boston,  Mass. 


Printers      ...      Lithographers 
Blank    Book    JYlanufacturers 


Private  Sales  and  Exchanges  Every  Day 

Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday 
at  10  A.  M. 

Consignments  Solicited.    Always  on  hand 
upward  ot  200  Horses  of  all  Grades. 


Telephone,  1184  Haymarket.     Cable  Address, '  HORSES  "  Boston 

Myer  Abrams  &  Co. 

International  Horse 


Harness   Exchange 

The  Largest  Horse  Emporium  in  New  England 

191  to  197  Friend  Street 
32   to   38   Travers   Street 

Near  North  Union  Station 


Largest  Wholesale   and  Retail  Dealers    in  New 

England  of  Harness,  Robes,  Blankets,  and 

Geneial  Horse  Equipment. 

We  carry  the  Largest  Stock  and  sell  at  Lowest  Prices. 

In  no  case  do  we  jjuarantce  ajrainsl  accident, 

sickness,  or  death. 


Excelsior 
Laundry    Company 


Successor  to 


F.  P.   COX   LAUNDRY   CO. 

Caunary 
Contractors 

Special  Attention  to 
FINE  CUSTOM   AND    FAMILY  WORK 

520    Harrison    Avenue 

Cor.  Randolph  Street  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,  985  TREMONT 


44 


CLASS  \  5  —  BAKERS  —  Singles 


(Continued) 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


264 
265 
266 
267 
268 
269 
270 
271 
272 
273 
-74 


OWNER'S   NAME 


Sanderson  Bakinsf  Co. 


Ward  Corbj  Co. 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


Briah  A.  Connor 

William  II.  Farrell 

Alfred  H.  Robinson 

Roger  Crerand 

Linwell  Foster 

Eugene  Miller 

Jos.  Luceir 

T.  P.  Marsters 

Henry  Majo 

George  Horn  ley 

Wm.  Prouty 


45 


L.  A.  WATERHOUSE 

\l/\lif\l/ 

ICruckman 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

155    FEDERAL    STREET 

TIMBERLAKE  &  SMALL 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

N.    E.   TEL.    1887-4 

rfvtvf* 

J.  O.  WETHERBEE  CO. 

LUMBER  DEALERS 

60  to  74   Bridge  Street, 

(Craigie  Bridge) 
EAST  CAMBRIDGE 


TELEPHONES,     ROXBURY  1266-2     DORCHESTER  28-1 


PAUL  G.  COBLENZER 


COAL 


ANTHRACITE 


620-622  Shawmut  Ave. 

BOSTON,    MASS. 


Branch :  Dorchester  Coal  Co,  Bernard  St ,  Dorchester. 


The  Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co. 


ITntcrior  S^ecorators 


DRAPERIES,  WALL  PAPERS,  WALL  HANGINGS, 
FURNITURE,  CARPETS,  DECORATIVE  PAINT- 
ING, PLAIN  PAINTING,  PAPIER  MACHE,  FUR- 
^  ^  ^   NITURE  COVERINGS,  RUGS  ^  ^  j*  ^ 


Telephone,  Main  6640 


8  Bosworth  Street,  Boston 


46 


CLASS  16  — BAKERS  — Doubles  and   Upward 

In   this   Class   the  Judges   may   award    ribbons   as    follows:    Three    ists;     One    2d;     Two   3ds 
Two  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

275 

J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Ferguson  Co. 

Moatt  Kel  lough 

2 

276 

" 

Walter  Colson 

2 

277 

" 

Thomas  Hunt 

2 

278 

.. 

Fred  O.  Evans 

4 

279 

George  G.  Fox  Co. 

William  II.  Vaughn 

2 

280 

u 

J.  Shealy 

2 

281 

Ward  Corby  Company 

Dan  Calnan 

2 

2S2 

" 

Charles  Schrieder 

2 

47 


J.  G.&  B.S.Ferguson  Co. 


Hi 

JAMES  G.  FERGUSON,  Pres. 
BENNETT  S.  FERGUSON,  Treas. 


Cbe  Ceaaing  Bakers 


gi&&g;&&&&&&g:&&&&&g-:&&6S-;6-6-e&&&&&g;g-:g: 


...  Compliments  of  .. 


H  Maiden  Electric  Co 


new  €iiglan(l 


-ANO- 


Malden  and  Melrose 
Gas  Light  Co. 


MALDENI,  MASS. 


gg;g;&&&&&&gi©&&§.:&g-:g:&&6g-;e§-:gi&©©g-:&e&6r 

J.  G.  WALKER  &  SON 

Telephone  401-2  So    Boston 

CORPORATION 

Wilson  TiSDALE  Co. 

M.  J    SHEA,  Manager 

CHICAGO  and  N.Y.  CITY 

Dressed  Beef 

Old   Colony 
Stable 

^^r^ 

WorKing  Morses  and  wagons  to  Let 
by  Day  or  Week 

36      NORTH      STREET 

BOSTON,   MASS. 


46   to   54    DORCHESTER    AVENUE 

South  Boston 


48 


CLASS  17  — CONFECTIONERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons   as  follows:  —  Three    ists;  Three  2ds  ;  Two  3ds  ; 
Two  4th  s. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 
Horses 

283 

Frederick  A.  Barber 

Frederick  A.  Barber 

I 

284     , 

M.  Frediani 

Ulysses  Frediani 

I 

285 

Hazen  Confectionery  Co. 

Edward  Agnew 

I 

286 

" 

R.  Loomer 

2 

2S7 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

Neil  McPhail 

I 

288 

Charles  F.  Qiiick 

I 

289 

.. 

Walter  H.  Beltis 

I 

290 

» 

Henry  La  Croiy 

2 

291 

" 

Warren  E.  Davis 

2 

292 

" 

Bartley  M.  Roe 

2 

49 


E.  S.   HARRIS 

Truckman 

Forwarder  of  Merchandise 
of  all  Descriptions  and 
GENERAL    .-.    JOBBING 

Office,   197  SOUTH  STREET 

Telephone  33  Oxford  •••  DOSTON 


C  BUTLEP  &  CO, 

.i*  Truckmen 


Poi^warders 

245  Purc.lAose  Street,  liOSTON 


Telephone  724    Main 


...  Established  1866  ... 


Boston    Forge  Co. 

HAMMERED  IRON  AND    STEEL 

FORCINGS 

Office  and  Works  at  BOSTON 

340  Maverick  St.,  East  Boston     M  A  b  b  . 


Hotel  and  Restaurant  Supplies 

Alfred   Sears  &   Co. 


Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal,  Beef 
Pork  and   Poultry 

Our  Specialties  


A.  S.  Smith,  Pres.  Thos.  Copeland,  Supt. 

Thos.  L.  Dunbar,  Treas.  W.  C.  Smith,  Asst.  Supt. 


Calves'  Livers,  Head  and  Feet,  Sweet  Breads,  Lambs  Fries 

15  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

3  Faneuil  Hall  Square     Ro<;tnn     TVIaS<? 

and  34  Merchants  Row  •LJOStOn,  IVAaSS. 


C.  Brigham  Company 


^  ^     WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN     ^  ^^ 

Milk,  Cream  and  Butter 

8   Massachusetts  Avenue,  Cambridge,   Mass. 


Telephone,  262  and  263   Ca:mh. 
50 


In   this   Class 
Six  4ths. 


CLASS  J  8  — GROCERS 

the  Judges   may  award  ribhons  as  follows:  —  Eight   ists  ;  Seven  2ds  ;    Six  3ds ; 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


293 
294 

29s 
296 

297 
29S 
299 
300 
301 
302 
303 
304 
30.S 
306 

307 
30S 

309 
310 
3" 
312 
313 
314 
315 
316 

317 
318 
319 


American  Grocery  Co. 

Bain  Brothers  Co. 
G.  D.  Emerson  Co. 


Eldridge  Baker  &  Co. 


H.  M.  Gidden 
Arthur  E,  Pettengill 
S.  S.  Pierce  Company 


M.  A.  Stewart 

P.  Terrile 

Timberlake  &  Small 


Warren  F.  Witherell  Co. 


Hyman  Price 
Harry  Oransky 
James  A.  Fitzgerald 
John  J.  Russell 
Samuel  Dobson 
Harvey  Steeves 
George  A.  Mills 
Daniel  Duggan 
Alfred  Brierson 
Elmer  Diamond 
John  S.  McAdams 
B.  Terrichame 
Charles  Kroft 
Wm.  J.  Cogan 
Edward  T.  Higgins 
John  W.  Hartford 
Clarence  H.  Jones 
Edward  O.  Eldridge 
George  Pendleton 
Patrick  Donahue 
Charles  W.  Smith 
George  E.  Magoun 
Louis  Conti 
Frank  Leslie 
Chester  B.  Fames 
Arthur  C.  Zwicker 
Daniel  Gallivan 


51 


Here 

itis;it 
speaks 
[for  itself. 
The 
typewriter 
of  the  present   and    of 
the  future. 

All  of  the  writing  visible  and  ac- 
cessible all  of  the  time. 
Broad,  pivotal,  frictionless  (patented) 
typebar  bearings,  without  type-guide — 
result:  best  action,  splendid  alignment, 
extraordinary  durability. 


The  MOfNARCH  TYPEWRITER    CO. 

12  Milk   St..  Boston,  Mass. 

(OLD    SOUTH    liUII-DING) 


PUREOXIA 

DCJY 
GING-ER   ALE 


yiig>  </.>>  <i,<>  </S>  <i,S>  </S>  <!.>>  <(v\>  </^  <fj^  <i_^  <y..9</.s>  <^ 


T.  J    PRIEST  M.  A.  NEVINS 

Telephone,  Roxbury  325 

T.J.  PRIEST  &  CO. 

BOARDING,     BAITING 
LIVERY   AND  SALE 

STABLE 

First  Class  Horse  Clipping  Done  by  Electricity 


SHOEIfNG   FORGE,  REED  STREET 


70-72-74  Northhampton  Street 

BOSTON,     MASS. 


Concord  Buggies 
Delivery  Wagons 
Drays,  Caravans 


Express  Wagons 

Furniture  Wagons 

Hose  Wagons 


Telephone  2047  Main 


ABBOTT -DOWNING 
COMPANY 

OF     CONCORD,     (N.   M. 

Salesroom  and  Repair  Department 

388-400  Atlantic  Wenue,  Boston 


Ladder  Trucks 
Street  Sweepers 
I        Patrol  Wagons 


Ambulances 
Street  Sprinklers 
Tip=Carts,  Sleds 


CLASS   19  — FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  —  Three  ists  ;  Two  2ds  ;  One  3d ;  Two  4ths. 


No. 

cf 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

320 

James  R.  Jones 

Allen  J.  Green 

321 

Osborn  Furniture  Co. 

Wm.  T.  Dalton 

322 

The  Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co. 

Carl  R.  L.  Peterson 

323 

" 

Wm.  Alexander  Cutting 

324 

" 

Justin  A.  Taylor 

325 

" 

George  Wm.  Murray 

326 

Wm.  H.  Matthews 

327 

Eugene  Villemaire 

John  Roche 

2 

CLASS  20— MANUFACTURERS  AND  MISCELLANEOUS— Singles 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  : —  Six  ists  ;  Five  2ds  ;  Five  3ds  ;  Five  4ths. 


^'Vvv\>ow.   -2J^ 


329 

330 

33^ 

332 

333 

334 

335 

336 

337 

338 

339 

340 

341 

342 

343 

343a 

344 

345 

345^ 

346 


—George  Adam  s  — -^ 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

Ginn  &  Company 

H.  J.  Heinz  Co. 

A.  E.  Kenney 

Thomas  McDowell 

Maiden  Electric  Co. 


Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Light  Co. 


Fred  S.  Pitman 
Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 
Edwin  T.  Russell  Co. 

Fred  J.  Sullivan 
I'nion  Glass  Co. 


James  Crowley 

William  J.  Barry 

Fred  W.  Iloey 

Charles  H.  Moore 

Philip  Gary 

Kenneth  M.  Charles 

Arthur  Dumbrack 

Hugh  O'Brien 

Charles  F.  Mil'er 

John  Bronkhorst 

Cornelius  A.  Griman 

Joseph  Baker 

Patrick  Farrar 

Denis  J.  Buckley 

Jeremiah  J.  Buckley 

Robinson  Griffin 

Fred  S.  Pitman 

John  H.  Galvin 

Thomas  F.  Creegan 

Fred  J.  Sullivan 

John  J.  Brady 


53 


John  T.  Connor 

g-:&:&@g-:&g:g-:&6g;&gig:&&&6:§&&$^&g:S;g:6:6;6:& 
Compliments    of 

.  •  . •  .     CONTRACTOR     . " . '  . 

New  England 
Confectionery    Company 

71  PALMER  STREET 

Tel.  749-3  Roxbury 

&&&&§;&©&&«5«-:&&&&&&&&&6-&&6  &g-:6- &&& 

George  Adams,  Mgr. 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Worl(S 

103  and  103  Bedford  St. 

Telephone,  Brighton  49-2 

Henry   Blewett 

Successor  to  R.  Klitzke  

French,  Vienna      R  A  I^  P  P     Pumpernickel 
Cream               Dr\rS.C  lA     Rye  Crisp 

BOSTOlN 

Telephone,     -     -     -     Oxford  90 

CLOTH  SPONGERS  AND  REFINISHERS 
London  Shrunk  Process 

and  Graham                                              Rolls,  Etc. 
250  Winchester  Street,  Brookline 

BREAD  and  ROLLS  at  Retail 
For  Sai,e  by 
A.  S   Spiegel,  141  Eliot  St  .  Boston 

Carl  A.  Weitz,  105  Eliot  St.,  Boston 

H.  Erath,  170  Friend  St.,  Boston 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.,  Brookline 

If  Our  Horses  Please  You,  Try  Our  Laundry  Work 


IlaundryII  j 

^ESTABLISHED  r^l 

^Bo^Tpjvf-.JHy' 

Collections  made  in 

ROSLINDALE,  DORCHESTER 
SOUTH  BOSTON,  BROOKLINE 
BACK  BAY  AND   CITY   Jt  ^  jt 


CITY  LAUNDRY 

C.  N.  &  F.  A.  CUNNINGHAM,  Proprietors 


Telephone,    283     Roxbury 


82  to  98  WEST  LENOX  STREET 

54 


CLASS  21— MANUFACTURERS  AND  MISCELLANEOUS 
Doubles  and  Upward 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  asfollows  :  Five  ists  ;  Five  2ds;  Three  3ds  ;  Three^ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

347 

Atwood  &  McManus 

James  F.  McLeod 

2 

34S 

" 

George  E,  Nay 

2 

349 

" 

Edgar  N.  Bryson 

2 

350 

" 

Thomas  Barrett 

2 

351 

.. 

William  H.  Bryson 

2 

352 

" 

John  A.  Campbell    ' 

2 
2 

353 

" 

Joseph  J.  Cronin 

354 

u 

Oliver  H.  Marrion 

2 

355 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co. 

Richard  D.  Landers 

2 

356 

Ginn  &  Company 

Robert  J.  Reid 

3 

357 

H.J.  Heinz  Co. 

Bartholomew  John  Nagle 

2 

358 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

Joseph  D.  Gallagher 

2 

359 

" 

Timothy  J.  Harrington 

2 

360 

" 

John  J.  Griffin 

2 

361 

u 

Cabot  R.  Brewster 

2 

362 

Standard  Oil  Company 

John  T.  Stewart 

2 

55 


CLASS  22  — BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS 

In   this    Class   the  Judges  may   award    Ribbons   as  follows: — Nine  ists;   Eight   2ds  ;  Seven  3ds 
Seven  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

363 

Ballantine  Breweries  Co. 

James  Rodden 

364 

" 

Patrick  Foley 

365 

11                     >> 

Wm.  Perry 

366 

" 

Daniel  Perry 

367 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

Wm.  W.  Borns 

368 

" 

John  J.  Murphy 

369 

b.  W.  Bridgham 

Fred  W.  Thomas 

5 

369a 

(_p.W.  Bridgham 

John  J.  Casson 

370 

Charles  H.  Cally 

Joseph  J.  Cheever 

371 

James  Collins  &  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Devine 

372 

M.  Dohertj  &  Co. 

Thomas  Henry  Gorman 

373 

W.  J.  Higgins 

Joseph  F.  Bird 

374 

u 

Frank  J    Higgins 

375 

John  Miller  &  Co. 

Frank  O'Brien 

376 

S.  G.  Parker  Co. 

Chester  Page 

377 

" 

Atwood  A.  Berry 

378 

" 

Ross  Dukeshni 

379 

" 

John  J.  O'Connor 

3S0 

<. 

Daniel  Sullivan 

381 

" 

Henry  Rowe 

382 

The  Pureoxia  Co. 

James  Ferguson 

383 

" 

James  Murphy 

384 

" 

Edward  MFitzpatrick 

385 

.. 

Wm.  O'Neil 

386 

" 

Isaac  F.  Turpin 

387 

" 

Henry  J.  Cole 

388 

" 

Frederick  Rehn 

389 

" 

John  Flynn 

390 

Stillman  Bottling  Co. 

Harry  Shapiro 

391 

" 

David  Pearlmon 

392 

A.  G.  ^"an  Nostrand 

Cornelius  Cor.oran 

56 


CLASS  23  —  BUILDING  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  : —  Five  ists;  Three  2ds;  Three  3ds  ;  Four  4ths 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry. 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

393 

Burke  Bros. 

Hugh  McDonald 

394 

John  H.  Doodj 

Andrew  Coyle 

395 

Eastern  Claj  Goods  Co. 

Wm.  Qiiirk 

396 

u 

Omer  Belanger 

397 

" 

George  Mallard 

398 

u 

John  Welch 

399 

Charles  A.  Green 

Daniel  James  Duane 

400 

Robert  C.  Guptill 

William  McCuish 

401 

John  J.    Hourihan 

Phillip  Corrigan 

^ 

402 

The  Hoyt  Company 

F.  W.  B.  Lockhart 

403 

James  P.  Mackey 

Charles  A.  Kenrick 

404 

W.  A.  Murtfeldt  Company 

William  Curtin 

._  _L_. 

405 

" 

Joseph  Donovan 

407 

Elmer  P.  Oakman 

George  R.  Tar  bell 

408 

J.  F.  Wellett 

John  J.  Sullivan 

67 


CLASS  24  — METALS    AND   JUNK 

In  this  Class   the  Judp^es    may   award   ribbons   as  follows:    Three  ists ;    Two  2ds;    Two  3ds 
Two  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

409 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Wm.  B.  Smith 

2 

410 

Harry  Butter 

Joseph  Sacks 

I 

Thomas  J   Carroll 

Thomas  J.  Carroll 

I 

Wm.  J.  Corbett  &  Co. 

Roger  Henrj  Flaherty 

2 

Covich  &  Daniel 

M.  Sacks 

I 

a 

Jake  Bradsky 

I 

Goldberg  &  Rathman 

Harry  Miller 

2 

416 

" 

S.  Lebovitz 

3 

418 

Morris  Silverman 

Morris  Silverman 

' 

CLASS  25  — HAY  AND  GRAIN 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :   Eight 


Six  2ds;  Six  3ds  ;  Six  4ths. 


420 

E   D.  Dodge 

Elmer  N.  Keith 

I 

421 

"           " 

Duncan  Cusick 

2 

422 

,ll                     u 

Fred  Leonard 

3 

423 

JLandy  Bros. 

Frank  Riemer 

424 

W.  M.  Robinson 

Joseph  Joyce 

425 

" 

John  McDermott 

426 

" 

M.  H.  Mowles 

427 

.;                           ii 

B.  H.  Brown 

428 

Nathan  Tufts  &  Sons 

John  Collins 

429 

" 

Cornelius  Crowley 

430 

"                   " 

Peter  Collins 

431 

" 

Cornelius  Kelly 

432 

it                        a 

Cornelius  Keefe 

433 

John  J.  White 

David  Cowhig 

434 

" 

Michael  F.  Hurley 

435 

" 

James  Noonan 

436 

W.  P.  Whittemore 

Charles  Faulkner 

437 

" 

Barnard  Fay 

438 

" 

Gerald  New- 

439 

" 

William  Graham 

440 

" 

Edward  Doyle 

441 

a 

Horace  Moody 

442 

" 

Patrick  Cleary 

443 

«'                     " 

John  Adams 

444 

a                         a 

Richard  McDonald 

3 

445 

"                         " 

Edward  Conroy 

4 

CLASS  26  — LUMBER 

In  this  Class   the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows: — Three  ists  ;    One  2d  ;    Two  3ds 
Two  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

446 

Curtis  &  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

Frank  Currie 

2 

447 

" 

Andrew  Meldon 

2 

44S 

" 

James  Hoag 

2 

449 

I.  N.  McLean 

Peter  McKinnon 

2 

450 

.. 

Frank  Hopkins 

2 

451 

" 

Alonzo  F.  McLean 

3 

45  i 

" 

W.  T.  McLean 

4 

4.53 

J.  0.  Wetherbee  Co. 

James  J.  Porter 

2 

CLASS  27  — ICE 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  Ribbons  as  may  be  deserved,  but  not  more  than  one  ist» 


4.54 

Fells  Ice  Co. 

David  Hemson 

2 

455 

.. 

Wm.  Moody 

2 

456 

" 

Guilford  D.  Saunders 

2 

Bain   Brothers   Co., 

LOCKE   COAL   CO., 

Wholesale     Grocers 

240  ^ 

/lilk  Street,    Boston. 

* 

Maiden  and  Medford, 

CLASS  28  — COAL  — Singles 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award   Ribbons  as  follows:  —  Eight   ists  ;    Seven   2ds ;    Six  3ds 
Six  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Entry 


457 
458 
459 
460 
461 
462 

463 
464 

465 
466 
467 
468 
469 
470 

471 
472 

473 
474 
475 
476 

477 
478 
478a 

479 
480 
481 
4S2 
483 


OWNER'S    NAME 


Bay  Stale  Fuel  Co. 
It  'I 

Brighton  Coal  Co. 
Paul  G.  Coblenzer 

Martin  Godvin 
Locke  Coal  Co. 

William  Greevey  &  Co. 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

E    S.  Morse 


J.  J.  O  Brien 

Staples  Coal  Co. 
J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


Moses  Carter 

Patrick  Bannon 

John  Crowley 

Michael  Malloy 

John  Sullivan 

Dennis  McCarty 

Charles  McCarty 

Jas.  J.  Godvin 

Joseph  Webb 

Thomas  Barrett 

John  McGilvey 

James  Lohan 

Michael  Reagen 

John  Donovan 

David  J.  Booker 

Jerry  O'Neil 

James  J'  Cavanaugh 

William  Qiiinn 

John  J.  Vaughan 

John  J.  Kenney 

M.  J.  O'Rourke 

H.  J.  McGonagle 

John  Brennan 

Harry  Martell 

Walter  E.  Higgins 

John  Gallagher 

Michael  Donovan 

Joseph  O'Neil 


60 


CLASS  29  — COAL  — Doubles  and  Upward 

In   this  Class  the  Judges  may   award  ribbons    as   follows:   Four   ists;    Four  2ds;    Three  -^ds- 
Three  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

48  + 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Robert  J.  Ward 

2 

4S5 

" 

Robert  Lynch 

2 

485a 

" 

Edward  Nolan 

2 

4S6 

Locke  Coal  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Powell 

2 

487 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Michael  T.  O'Brien 

2 

488 

" 

•b           Michael  Griffin 

2 

489 

E.  S.  Morse 

Richard  Bradley 

2 

490 

<i 

Thomas  Tyne 

2 

491 

'• 

James  J.  Sweeney 

2 

492 

John  Doherty 

3 

493 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

Patrick  Murphy 

2 

494 

"          '• 

John   Wilson 

3 

495 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

John  Santry 

2 

496 

"          " 

Michael  Santry 

3 

In  this   Clas 
Five  4ths. 


CLASS  30  — CONTRACTORS 

the  Judges   may  award  ribbons   as    follows:     Seven    ists;   Six     2ds ;     Five   3ds : 


497 

John  T.  Connors 

Gordon   Foster 

2 

49S 

" 

Martin  O'Brien 

2 

499 

" 

William  Barnett 

2 

500 

Wm.  Gilligan 

Thomas  McCarthy 

2 

501 

" 

Thomas  Kennedy 

2 

502 

John  May 

2 

503 

" 

Steve  Conry 

2 

504 

" 

Wm.  McKenna 

2 

505 

" 

Jacob  Nelson 

2 

.S06 

'« 

John   Kearns 

2 

507 

John  Fay 

2 

508 

" 

Edward  Norris 

3 

509 

" 

Wm.   Crowley 

2 

510 

James  Grady 

James  W.  Grady 

I 

5ti 

Hennessy  Brothers 

Patrick  McLean 

2 

512 

J.  Holland 

Thomas  Melady 

2 

513 

John  McNealy 

Joseph  Joyce 

2 

514 

" 

Owen  J.  McNealy 

2 

515 

" 

John  Leacy 

2 

516 

John  T.  Noone 

Barney  Rigney 

I 

517 

" 

Joseph  Gilday 

2 

518 

" 

John   Bird 

2 

519 

Chester  W.  Reed 

Henry  H.  Rice 

2 

31 


CLASS   3 1  —  TRUCKMEN  —  Singles 

In    this    Class  the  Judges   may   award   ribbons  as   follows: — Seven    ists;   Five  2ds  :   Five  3ds 
Five  4th s. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

520 

Henry  Bateman 

521 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

522 

W.  C.  Bray 

523 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

524 

" 

525 

u 

526 

E.  S.  Harris 

5^7 

528 

S.  B.  Holman 

529 

" 

530 

R.  A.  Kennett 

531 

" 

532 

A.  W.  Knight 

533 

Sargent  Teaming  &  Rigging  Co. 

534 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

535 

William  Tyner  &  Sons 

536 

Henry  W.   Walter 

F,37 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

538 

" 

539 

" 

540 

Whipple  &  Co. 

541 

" 

DRIVER'S   NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


Henry  Bateman 

Daniel  Hayes 

Everett  P.  Mclntire 

Edward  White 

Michael  McAloon 

Patrick  J.  Dooley 

Charles  W.  Harris 

Fred  Hazlebrook 

John  T.  McQiiade 

Joseph  Wardsworth 

Henry  Harvey 

Parley  Merrifield 

John  J.  ISIahoney 

Patrick  Jos.  McSweeney 

Michael  Welch 

Joseph  Galvin 

Frank   H.  Walter 

Fred  L.  Davidson 

Thos.  F.  McNamaia 

Robert  A.  Davidson 

George  Kennison 

Charles  Roberts 


62 


CLASS   32:—  TRUCKMEN  —  Doubles 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons 
Nine  4th&. 


follows:  —  Ten    ists;    Nine  2ds  :    Eight  3ds 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

542 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Thomas  Murray 

2 

543 

John  Coffey 

2 

544 

W.  C.  Bray 

James  E.  Pinkham 

2 

545 

'• 

Fred  Feyler 

2 

546 

" 

Wm.  M.  Parrott 

2 

547 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

Wm.  S.  McKendry 

2 

548 

W.  W.  Croft 

Norman  T.  Fritz 

2 

549 

R.  J.  Elder 

Bernard  Peterson 

2 

550 

" 

Charles  H.  Bissett 

2 

551 

Edwin  T.  Frost 

Chas.  DeCosta 

2 

552 

E.  S.  Harris 

Albert  Arthur 

2 

553 

" 

Fred  E.  Downie 

2 

554 

" 

Martin  Cunningham 

2 

555 

'• 

Joseph  Harris 

2 

556 

W.  B.  Hammond 

John  Burns 

2 

557 

R.  A.  Kennett 

George  Ben  ham 

2 

558 

" 

William  Duncan 

2 

559 

" 

Elwood  S.  Demeritt 

2 

560 

" 

Reuben  Keith 

2 

561 

Edward  A.  Sears 

James  C.  Mullen 

2 

562 

A.  H.  Shedd  &  Co. 

William  F.  Mueser 

2 

563 

Henry  W.  Walter 

Henry  W.  Walter 

2 

564 

N.  Ward  Company 

Archibald  McDonald 

2 

565 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

W.  F.  Meese 

2 

566 

"" 

Wm.  M.  Erskine 

2 

567 

Wheeler,  Estabrook  Co. 

Patrick  H.  Brady 

2 

568 

" 

Joseph  McCune 

2 

569 

" 

Patrick  J.  Brogan 

2 

570 

Whipple  &  Co. 

John  Ames 

2 

571 

" 

George  Brown 

2 

572 

" 

William  Brown 

2 

573 

.. 

John  Collins 

2 

574 

.. 

Walter  Tucker 

2 

575 

.. 

William  Murray 

2 

576 

w 

Frank  Manning 

2 

577 

"           " 

Abel  Northern 

2 

63 


CLASS  33  — TRUCKMEN  — Fours 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  will  award  such  ribbons  as  may  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS   NAME 

No. 

of 
Horses 

579 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Peter  F.  Dolan 
David  Regan 

4 
4 

CLASS  34  — LAWRENCE  GOLD  MEDAL 

Open  to  all  Fours,  provided  that  the  driver  is  also  the  groom  of  his  horses.     Other  things  beinj 
equal,  the  older  horses  to  be  preferred. 

First  Prize,  the  Lawrence  Gold  Medal,  and  a  Blue  ribbon. 

Second  Prize,  $5.00,  offered  by  the  Association,  and  a  Red  ribbon. 

In  addition,  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons  as  may  be  deserved. 

The  Gold  Medal  and  the  Money  Prize  go  to  the  owners ;  the  Ribbons  to  the  drivers. 


5S0 

R.J    Elder 

Edward  A.  Morse 

581 

T    S    Hilliard&  Son 

Thomas  Carghill 

582 

.< 

George  Wilson 

583 

R.  A.  Kennett 

Levi  Clarke 

584 

J.  W.  McEnany 

Philip  Henry  Boyd 

585 

Charles  I.  Pearson 

Charles  I.  Pearson 

H.    A.     FORBES     &     CO., 

New  York,  Philadelphia,  Boston,  Baltimore. 

Peat=Moss  Sanitary   Bedding 

For  horses  of   all   classes. 


Will  do  it  for  14c  a  horse  a  week  and  less.  What  is  straw 
costing  you?  Positively  no  odor  in  the  stable.  No  disin- 
fectants needed.  No  drains  needed.  Will  not  stain  white 
horses.  Horses  will  not  eat  it.  Keeps  the  feet  in  perfect 
health.  Prevents  diseases.  Absolutely  no  stable  odor  to 
permeate  the  livery,  robes,  etc.,  and  carriage  fixtures  where 
our  f  EAT- MOSS  is  used.  Highest  testimony  from  most 
prominent  owners  of  horses  of  all  classes. 


Established  18S6. 


Telephone  414  John. 


122  Water  Street,  Near  Wall  Street,  New  York. 

We  supply  some  of  the  most  important 
stock  farms 


American  Grocery  Co. 

101  =  103  Fulton  St.,  cor.  Richmond  St. 

Wholesale  Grocers 

Solicit  Patronage  of  Small  as  well  as 
Large  Retail   Grocers. 

ONE     LOW    PRICE    TO     ALL. 


64 


CLASS  35— MULES 


I 

n  this 

jlass  the  Judges  will  award  such  ribbons  as 

may  lie  deserved. 

No. 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNERS'  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

is 

586 

Wm.  U.  Smith  &  Co. 

Walter  A.  Smith 

I 

587 

Curtis  &  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

Timothy  Crowley 

2 

588 

S.  D.  Hicks  &  Son 

Patrick  J.  Clements 

2 

The  Association  derives  a  profit  from  the  sale  of  the 
catalogue  and  of  the  souvenir  postal  cards,  and  of  the  small 
flags,  to  be  worn  as  ornaments  —  all  of  which  can  be 
obtained  by  spectators  along  the  line  of  the  Parade. 

Photographs  of  some  of  the  finest  horses  shown  in  the 
Parade  can  be  obtained  of  the  .Secretary. 


The  Unique  and  Wonderful  Food  for 

Cattle,  Horses,  Sheep,   Pigs  and  Poultry 

MoLASsiNE  Meal  puts  the  digestive  organs  in  perfect  con- 
dition, and  enables  animals  to  obtain  the  whole  of  the 
nutriment  of  their  entire  food. 

Worms  Cannot  Exist  in  its  Presence. 

Consumption  over  120,000  tons  annually  and  always  in- 
creasing.     Price,  $2.00  per  bag,    100  lbs. 

For  further  particulars  write  to 


98  High  Street,   Boston 


Sole  Agent,   U.  S.  America 


65 


S.     G.     PARKER     CO., 

21  Columbia  Street. 

Soda  Water,  Saratoga  Spring  Waters 


AND 


Dr.  Sweet's  Genuine  Root  Beer 


iiN    fountain; 


J.     C.     TALCOT 

FANCY    AFSD    STAPLE 
GROCERIES 

1157  Washington  St.      ..       Dorchester 

Branch   Store 
Associates'    Building,    IViiiton 

Established  181 S 

For  over  37  years 


We  have  been  Makers 
of 


Good  Harness 

and  Collars 


J  AS.  FORGIE'S  SONS, 

19  &  20  So.  Market  St., 
Boston 


GEO.     W.     EPPS, 


Butter,  Cheese  and  Eggs 

25    Cedar    Street, 

W.    Somerviiie 


Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co., 
122  W.  First  Street 

Wholesale  Agent  for 

Standard  Wood  Co.,  of  New  York. 


Miller's  "Gamecock" 

The    King    of    ail 
Wliisl<ies 

John     Miller    &    Co., 

Sole     Proprietors. 

Park  Square,  Boston. 

ELM  FARM  MILK  CO. 

Pure «  milk  «  and  «  Cream 

CREAM,  CONDENSED  MILK,  BUTTERMILK 

MILK  DELIVERED  IN  GLASS  JARS 

SPECIAL  DAIRIES  OF  MILK  FOR  CHILDREN 

I  ASTEURIZED  CREAM 


We  have  a  fint-  set  of  dairies  and  makea  sjieciMlty  of  : 
trade.   Droj)  us  a  postal.    We  will  take  paiii>  to  "plea 


Wales  Place,  Dorchester,  Massachusetts 

TELEPHONE,     450     DORCHESTER 


66 


LIST  OF  JUDGES,   J  906 


Allin,  II.  N. 
Baker,  Geo.  M. 
Baker,  James  E. 
Baldwin,  James  W. 
Barnes,  Dr.  W.  E. 
Bajlej,  S.  K. 
Beckett,  Dr.  E.  C. 
Blackwood,  Dr.  Thomas 
Brigham,  Wm    E. 
Brooks,  J.  I. 
Brummett,  W.  M. 
Bunker,  Dr.  Madison 
Cass  id  J,  Edward 
Caldwell,  Elias  F. 
Crampton,  George  A. 
Draper,  Dr.  A.  W. 
Dummer,  R.  G. 
Duncan,  John  W. 
Eldredge,  F.  S. 
Fenelon,  Patrick  C. 
Fellows,  Albert 
Field,  Horace  F. 
Fitch,  Dr.  A.  H. 
Fogg,  G    M. 

Gilligan,  James  T. 
Gilligan,  William 
Glancj,  Wm   J 
Gallup,  II    P. 

Harrington,  Dr.  E.  T. 
Harrington,  Geo    W. 
Haven,  Hiram 
Hill,  Dr    A    G. 
Iloftman,  E.  II. 

Johnson,  Arthnr  R. 


Keogh,  Dr.  D.  P. 
Kennv,  John  R. 

Langlan,  Thos. 
LaBaw,  Dr.  W.  L. 
Lord,  Wm.  H. 

Man  ley,  Lowell 
Matthews,  Joseph  B. 
May,  Dr.  A.  H. 
McManus,  II.  P. 
McKennej,  J.  D. 
McLean,  I.  N. 
Mason,  T. 
Nevens,  M.  A. 
O'Riorden,  J.  P. 
Parker,  Augustin  II. 
Peters,  Harry 
Pettigrew,  J.  A. 
Pierce,  Dr.  B.  D. 
Pierce,  Geo.  W. 
Pepper,  Chas.  Ilovey 
Robinson,  J.  E. 
Robinson,  N.  T. 
Rollin,  Dr.  J.  II. 
Ryder,  W.  H. 
Stuart,  Geo.  E. 
Souther,  Dr.  H.  A. 
Sullivan,  John  H. 
Vaughan,  Henry  G. 
Wadsuorth,  Dr.  S.  F. 
Wales,  S.  Walter 
White,  Dr.  A.  F. 
Wright,  Harry  E. 
Wheeler,  L.  E. 
Wood,  Dr.  C.  R. 


VETERINARY  INSPECTOR 
DR.    FRANK    J.    SULLIVAN 


CHIEF  MARSHAL 
ARTHUR    PERRIN 


AIDS 
RANDOLPH  K.  CLARKE  WM.  D.  QUIMBY 
JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d        JOHN  H.  SMITH 
AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.R  C.V.S.  FRANCIS  PEABODY 
JOHN  H.   JEWETT  HARRY  BOYD 

C.  II.  JEWELL  CHARLES  L.  BURRILL 

HARRY  W.  SOULE 


LOUIS  F.  GAVET 
HENRY  O.  HOUGHTON 
Ju.  THOMAS  H.  RING 
JOHN  F.  WATERS 
A.  H.   DWELLEY 


HARRY  A.  FROTHINGHAM. 

67 


mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm&mm&mmmmmmm&.mm^ 


LIST  OF  CONTRIBUTORS  IN  1906 


R.  L    Aggassiz 

American  Humane  Education  Society 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Gen.  Wm.  A.  Bancroft 

Walter  C.  Baylies 

E.  Pierson  Beebe 

A.  S.  Bigelow 

Miss  H.  Gertrude  Bird 

Mrs.  Arthur  W.  Blake 

Stephen  Bullard 

John  T.  Burnett 

I.  Tucker  Burr 

Boston  Horse  Show  Company 

E.  S.  C. 

Mrs.  A.  T.  Cabot 

C.  A.  Campbell 

Samuel  Carr 

Miss  Clemence  Crafts 

George  G.  Crocker 

Frederick  Cunningham 

Mrs.  Margaret  Deland 

Mrs.  Samuel  Eliot 

A  Friend 

Fells  Ice  Co. 

Frederick  P.  Fish 

J.  Murray  Forbes 

Mrs    Reginald  Foster 

Mrs.  Edward  Frothingham 

Ginn  &  Company 

Edward  W.  Grew 
R.  C.  Hooper 
Mrs.  John  E.  Hudson 
W.  D.  Hunt 

Miss  Nora  lasigi 

Miss  Flora  Jarves 

Mrs.  C.  W.  Kennard 

Mr.  &  Mrs.  Chas.  A.  Kidder 

G.  Otto  Kunhardt 

John  Lawrence 

Mrs.  Caroline  IF  Lawrence 

Augustus  P.  Loring 


Joseph  Lee 

F.  H.  Manning 

Massachusetts  Society  for  Prevention  of  Cruelty 

to  Animals 
Miss  M.  C.  Mixter 
Henry  Lee  Morse 
John  T.  Morse,  Jr. 
The  Misses  Motley 
Maj    Wm.  L.  Mitchell 
"M." 

Ormond,  Florida 
The  Misses  Parsons 
Gen.  Chas.  J.  Paine 
Mrs.  Rosamond  L.  Peabody 
Mrs.  J.  C,  Philips 
F.  A.  Peters 
Mrs.  Sarah  G.  Putnam 
Mrs.  James  L.  Russell 
Miss  Marion  Russell 
Charles  S.  Rackemann 
Richard  M.  Saltonstall 
Mrs.  Florence  A.  Sanborn 
George  B.  Shattuck 
Henry  Sigourney 
Miss  Roxanna  Stackpole 
Mrs.  Daniel  Staniford 
Mrs    Robert  S.  Sturgis 
Francis  Shaw     ' 
Henry  W.  Swift 
Maj.  Thomas  Talbot 
Mrs    Ezra  Ripley  Thayer 
John  E.  Thayer 
Mrs.  George  Tyson 
Union  Glass  Company 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  G.  Wadsworth 
Samuel  D.  Warren 
Miss  Lily  West 
Mrs.  Alice  E.  Wheatland 
Messrs.  Whipple  &  Co. 
George  Wigglesworth 
Ralph  B.  Williams 
Miss  Julia  U.  Worthington 
Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Wright 
Waldo  Young 


68 


y 


r 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


American  Grocery  Company 

Abbott-Downing  Co. 

Adams  Trust  Co. 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Allnutt,  F.  G. 

Boston  Suburban  Express  Co. 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co. 

Butler,  S.  &  Co. 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Brigham  C.  Co. 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

Bain  Bros. 

Blewett,  Henry 

Boston  Molasses  Co. 

Berry  C.  &  Co. 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co. 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Bunker  Hill  Carriage  Co. 

Buckman,  C.  P.  Sz  Co. 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

City  Laundry  Co. 

Connor,  John  T. 

Coblenzer,  Paul 

Dodge,  E.  D. 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 

Doherty,  M.  &  Co. 

Epps,  George  W. 

Excelsior  Laundry  Co. 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Fox,  George  G.  &  Co. 

Frediani  &  Sons 

Forbes,  H.  A. 

Forgie's,  Jas.  Sons 

Ferguson,  J.  G.  &  B.  S. 

Goldberg  &  Rath  man 

Gilligan,  Wm. 

Higgins,  W.  J. 

Howard,  W.  B. 

Hill  &  Hill 

Hovery,  C.  F.  &  Co. 

Hood,  H.  P.  &  Sons 

Hilliard,  J.  S.  &  Son 

Harris,  E    S. 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

Joy  Steamship  Company 

Kennett,  R   A. 

Keyes,  The  Stationer 

Lowney,  Walter  M.  Co. 
London  Harness  Company 
Locke  C6al  Co. 


64 

34 
iS 

34 
32 
66 
50 
50 
50 
72 
59 
54 
iS 

44 

iS 
iS 


34 
38 
34 
24 
20 
22 
50 
3^ 
22 
22 
44 
22 
42 
59 


Meyer  Abrams  Co. 

44 

McCall,  Frank 

30 

Monarch  Visible  Typewriter 

52 

Molassine  Meal 

65 

McKenney  &  Waterbury  Co. 

34 

Metropolitan  Coal  Company 

24 

Maiden  Electric  and  Maiden  c^  Melrose  Gas 

Light  Co. 

48 

Morse,  Eugene  S. 

26 

Miller,  John  &  Co. 

66 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

54 

Newcomb,  J.  S. 

38 

Pierce  S.  S.  Co. 

16 

Parker,  S.  G.  Co. 

66 

Packard,  J.  D.  &  Sons 

26 

Plant,  Thomas  G.  Co. 

12 

Proctor  Bros. 

40 

Pureoxia,  The  Co. 

52 

Priest,  Thos.  J.  &  Co. 

52 

Porter's  Market 

40 

Perry,  The  Lewis  F.  &  Whitney  Co. 

46 

Roessle  Brewery  Co. 

40 

Richardson,  J.  H. 

42 

Robinson,  W.  M. 

40 

Red  Acre  Farm 

30 

Revere  Rubber  Co. 

38 

Scully,  John  T.  Bros. 

40 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

26 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co. 

26 

Sargent  &  Ham  Co. 

36 

Speidel,  L   &  Co. 

38 

Sears,  Alfred 

.  50 

Siegel,  H.  &  Co. 

30 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

72 

Tufts,  N.  &  Son 

72 

Tighe,J.  T.  &  Co. 

36 

Talcot.J.  C. 

66 

Timberlake  &  Small 

46 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 

54 

Van  Buskirk,  Chas.  &  Son 

44 

White,  Dr.  A.  F. 

36 

Walker,  J.  G.  &  Sons 

48 

White,  R.  H.  &  Co. 

42 

Wetherbee,  J.  O.  Co. 

46 

Waterhouse,  L.  A. 

46 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 

28 

Whipple  &  Co. 

28 

Whittemore,  W.  P. 

28 

Woods,  John  M.  &  Co. 

28 

Woodberry,  D.  S. 

36 

Wilson  Tisdale  Company 

48 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

36 

69 


mmmmmmmmmmm^.mmmmm^-s^^&.^&^-mmm^mmmmm 


...  Program  ... 

I. 

Maikii,   "  Col.  Wellington  "... 

Reeves 

2. 

ExcEKi'Ts  FitOM    '"Fantana  "             ... 

li  itmark 

3- 

Valsk  de  Concert  "-  Blue  Danube"      . 

Strauss 

4- 

Descriptive,  "  The  Hunting  Scene"     . 

Bticalossi 

5- 

Entre  Acts  j  ^'  ['f'^'^'  ^f^lf  "            "          " 
d.   "La  Sorella"      . 

Moret 
Borel-Chrc 

6. 

Overture,  "  William  Tell  " 

Rossini 

7- 

March,   "  7th  Army  Corps 

Weldon 

8. 

Gems  FROM  "  Carmen  "           .... 

Bizet 

9- 

P0PUI.AR  Hits  !  ;;Dusky  Rose''      .   _.          . 
(  "Moonlight  in  JJixiu 

Allen 
Cleine7it 

lO. 

Spanish  Waltz,  "Bells  of  Seville 

Lampe 

II. 

Descriptive,  "Cavalry  Charge" 

L/iders 

12. 

Finale,  "2nd  Regiment  Connecticut" 

First  Regiment  Band 

A.  H.  MERRITT           ...           Bandmaster 

Reeves 

Caleb  P.  Buckman  &  Co. 

^r  Tremont  Temple 
Decorators 

Decorations  for  All  Occasions 

Booths   Designed,   Erected   and   Decorated   for   Fairs,  Etc. 

Mourning  Draping  Done  at  Short  Notice. 


Room  723,  Tremont  Temple  Building 


Telephone,  Main  6246  ... 


Boston 


70 


RULES  OF  THE  ROAD 

From  "RIDER  AND  DRIVER"  New  York,  as  compiled  by  Mr.  William  Phelps  Eno. 

SIGNALS 

:.  In  slowing  np  or  stopping,  a  signal  should  ulwajs  be  given  to  those  behind  bv  raising  the 
whip  or  hand  vertically. 

2.  In  turning  while  in  motion,  or  in  starting  to  turn  from  a  stanilstill,  a  signal  should  be 
given  bv  raising  the  whip  or  hand,  indicating  with  it  the  direction  in  which  the  turn  is  to  be  made. 

RIGHT  OF  WAY 

I.  On  all  the  public  streets  or  highways  all  vehicles  going  in  a  northerly  or  southerly  direction 
should  ha\e  the  right  of  way  over  all  vehicles  going  in  an  easterly  or  westerly  direction. 

J.  The  oificers  and  men  of  the  Fire  Department  and  Fire  Patrol,  with  their  fire  apparatus  of 
all  kinds,  w^hen  going  to,  on  duty  at  or  returning  from  a  fire,  and  all  aml)ulances,  the  oificers  and 
men  and  \ehicles  of  the  Police  Department,  United  States  mail  wagons,  and  all  physicians  who 
have  a  police  permit,  have  the  right  of  way,  at  all  times,  in  any  street,  and  through  any  procession- 

SPEED 

No  vehicle  should  proceed  at  any  time  at  a  greater  speed  than  the  law  allows,  and  is  safe  and 
proper  under  the  conditions  then  obtaining. 

DEFINITIONS 

1.  All  avenues  and  streets  with  a  parkway  in  the  middle  should  be  considered  as  having  but 
one  roadway. 

2.  The  word  vehicle  includes  equestrians  and  everything  on  wheels  or  runners,  except  street 
cars  and  baby  carriages. 

Importance  of  Keeping  to  the  Right,  Passing,  Turning,  Crossing  and  Stopping 

1.  Slowly  moving  vehicles  should  keep  to  the  right  and  as  near  the  right-hand  curb  as 
possible,  so  as  to  leave  room  in  the  middle  of  the  street  for  vehicles  going  at  a  greater  speed. 

2.  A  vehicle  meeting  another  should  pass  on  the  right 

3.  A  vehicle  overtaking  another  should  pass  on  the  left  side  of  the  overtaken  vehicle  and  not 
pull  over  to  the  right  until  entirely  clear  of  it. 

4.  A  vehicle  turning  into  anothei-  street  to  the  right  should  turn  the  corner  as  near  the  right- 
hand  curb  as  practicable. 

Thus.  J  I 


5.      In   turning   into  another  street   to   the   left,  the  vehicle   should  turn    around  the  center  of 


intersection  of  the  two  streets. 

Thus:  I  I  'Not  this  way  I  I 


■^   M — i-N.  r 


6.     A  vehicle  crossing  from  one  side  of  the  street  to  the  other  side  should  do  so, 
thus:  not  this  way:  nor  this  way. 


7.  No  vehicle  should  stop  with  its  left  side  to  the  curb,  excejit  on  established  cab,  hack  and 
truck  siands. 

8.  Unless  in  an  emergenc\-  or  to  allow  another  vehicle  or  pedestrian  to  cross  its  path,  no 
vehicle  should  stop  in  any  public  street  or  highway,  except  near  the  right-hand  curb  thereof,  so  as 
not  to  obstruct  a  crossing. 

71 


NATHAN   F.  TUFTS 


Established   1841 


CHARLES   E.    FITZ 


Nathan  Tufts  &  Sons 


Bunker  Hill  Elevator 


59  Cambridge  Street 


CHARLESTOWN 


Near  East  Somervllle  Station,  B.  &  fl.  R.  R. 


Grain,    Meal,    Feed, 
Hay  and   Straw 


Poultry  and  Pigeon  Feed 


Main  Office,  Warren  Bridge,  Cambridge,  IVIass. 


BOSTON  RUBBER 
SHOE  COMPANY 


TRADE     MARK 


RUBBER  FOOTWEAR  WITH 
THIS  TRADE  MARK. 


Staples  Coal  Co. 

Coal  anb  Wioob 


BOSTON    OFFICE 

Room  703.  35  CONGRESS  ST. 

WHARVES 
Cor.  Sumner  SIreet  and  INorth   Ferry  Ave. 

EAST  BOSTON 


72 


I 


BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


/ 


1907 


CATALOGUE 


(INCORPORATED) 


FIFTH  ANNUAL  PARADE 


iiay  3mi|.  IBUT 


1907 

A.  T.  BLISS  c^  CO. 


InarJi  of  itr^rtora 


HENRY    C.  MERWIN,  President, 

State  House,  Room  356. 

RANDOLPH    K.  CLARKE,    Vice-President, 

72  Uncoln  Street. 

ARTHUR    PERRIN,    Vice-President, 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline. 

LEWIS    A.  ARMISTEAD,    Secretary, 

loi  Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA   ATWOOD,  3d,  Treasurer, 

City  Hall. 


CHARLES    L.   BURRILL,    53  State  Street. 

JOHN    H.    JEWETT,    Boston  Herald. 

FRANCIS    PEABODY,    Jr.,  Devonshire  Building. 

AUSTIN    PETERS,   M.R.C.V.S.,   State  House,  Room  138, 

WM.    D.  QUIMBY,   79  Portland  Street. 

BENJ.    W.  WELLS,    Fire  Commissioner,  Bristol  Street. 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


HE  history  of  the  Annual  Work-Horse  Parade  in  Boston  has  already  been 

^  I  '  recorded  in  the  catalogues  for  previous  years.     The  earliest  suggestion  of 

■*"  forming  an  association  for  this   purpose   was   made   by  the  late   Eobert 

Ashton   Lawrence,  who  became  its  first  President,  and  who  was  always 

its  generous  friend  and  benefactor.     Time  has  not  diminished  the  sense 

of  loss  which  his  untimely  death  caused  to  his  old  associates.    His  warm 

heart  and  manly  impulses,  his  modesty,  his  readiness  to  assist  the  needy, 

his  sympathy  with  all  sorts  and  conditions  of  men  endeared  him  to  them. 

He  was  a  gentleman  and  a  sportsman   of  the   old   school,   free   from   all 

affectation,   courteous   and   quiet  in  manner,  but  dignified  and  punctilious. 

The  Lawrence  Gold  Medal,  the  principal  prize  offered  annually  by  the  Association,  will, 

we  hope,  preserve  his  memory  for  many  years  to  come. 

Last  year  the  Association  announced  with  regret  the  resignation  of  C.  S.  Packe- 
mann,  Esq.,  and  J.  W.  Bartol,  M.  I).,  from  the  Board  of  Directors.  This  year  the 
Board  has  lost  Mr.  J.  H.  Smith,  of  tlie  firm  of  Youlden,  Smith  and  Hopkins.  To 
his  energ}''  and  wise,  practical  judgment  the  Association  is  greatly  indebted,  and  the 
Directors  trust  that  they  will  always  have  the  benent  of  his  advice  and  co-operation. 
Mr.  Charles  L.  Burrill,  a  well-known  banker,  deeply  interested  in  the  humane  treat- 
ment of  horses,  takes  Mr.  Smith's  place. 


MEN  AND  HORSES. 


One  fact  has  often  forced  itself  upon  ihe  attention  of  the  Directors,  nameJy,  that 
the  welfare  of  the  work-horse  is  bound  up  with  the  welfare  of  the  men  who  drive  and 
care  for  him.  In  stables  where  the  men  are  well  ])aid  and  are  treated  with  kindness 
and  consideration  by  the  proprietor,  the  horses,  in  turn,  are  well  treated  by  the  men, 
and  look  sleek  and  contented.  On  the  other  hand,  in  stables  where  there  is  bad  feeling, 
or  utter  want  of  good  feeling,  between  the  omplo3'er  and  his  men,  the  horses  suffer 
accordingly.  Pecognizing  these  facts,  some  public-spirited  women  in  New  York  and 
also  in  Chicago  have  recently  organized  clubs  for  teamsters,  and  even  clubs  for  team- 
sters' wives.     This  is  a  step  in  the  right  direction. 


Bad  toanisters  ^eein  to  gravitate  naturally  to  employers  who  do  not  really  care 
about  their  horses.  If  the  owner  is  a  humane  man,  the  spirit  of  humanity  will  per- 
vade his  whole  business.  Jf  he  is  cruel,  or  simply  indifferent,  a  spirit  of  brutality,  or 
at  least  of  selfish  indiSerence,  will  run  through  his  force. 

The  highly  developed  nervous  system  of  the  horse  renders  him  peculiarly  capable 
of  suffering.  Eough  usage,  even  if  it  stops  fai  short  of  absolute  l^rutality,  keeps  him 
in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation.  Anyone  who  is  accustomed  to  observe  horse? 
can  tell  by  a  single  glance  at  a  given  horse  Avhether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad  or  indif- 
ferent one.  The  expression  of  the  animal's  eye,  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears,  loll  the 
story  unmistalcably. 

There  are  many  teamsters  who  treat  the  horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and  there- 
fore are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty  toward  him,  which  reacts  on  their  own  charac- 
ters. Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their  lives,  and  their  daily  labor  becomes  a 
degradation  and  a  curse  to  them. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many  humane  drivers,  who  have  a  real  affection  for 
their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in  their  appearance.  These  men  make  good 
husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens;  and  their  daily  labor  is  not  only  a  means  of 
livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of  happiness.  To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is 
the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse   Parade  Association. 

SCHOOLS  FOR  DRIVERS. 

The  past  winter  in  Boston  has  !:)een  cold  and  ihc  streets  have  been  icy  to  a  degree 
perhaps  never  knovn  before,  and  work-horses  have  suffered  accordingly.  The  snow  is 
removed  so  qiiickly  that  it  is  impossible  to  keep  horses  sharp,  and  the  city  authori- 
ties are  extremely  negligent  in  sanding  the  slippery  pavements.  These  circumstances 
are  bad  enough,  but  they  are  aggravated  by  bad  driving.  It  is  a  common  thing  to  see 
a  pair  of  work-horses  slipping  and  straining,  witli  the  reins  loose  on  their  backs, 
necks  stretched  out,  and  legs  sprawling;  whereas,  of  course,  they  should  be  well  col- 
lected, the  reins  taut,  necks  arched,  legs  well  under  theui,  and  toes  gripping  the 
pavement. 

In  backing,  also,  horses  are  continually  hampered  by  bad  driving;  their  muscles 
are  strained,  their  tempers  irritated,  and  their  stren^h  exhausted — all  because  the 
driver  docs  not  know  how  to  direct  their  efforts. 

Last  year  a  school  for  drivers  was  established  in  Paris,  and  during  the  past  win- 
ter a  course  of  instruction  has  been  given  to  the  drivers  employed  by  a  large  firm  in 
Chicago.  That  something  of  the  sort  would  be  useful  in  Boston  is  ob\dous,  and  the 
Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association  would  be  glad  to  co-oixrate  in  the  matter  with 
the  master  truckmen,   or  with  any  other  persons. 


THE  DISPOSAL  OF  OLD  HORSES. 

There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  eomnuinity  that  old  and  worn-out,  or  painfully 
lame  horses  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  otherwise  disposed  of  in 
a  humane  manner.  Under  the  present  Fire  Commissioner  of  Boston  many  of  the  dis- 
carded horses  of  that  department  have  been  sent  to  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  home  for 
horses  at  Stow.  A  bill  has  recently  been  introduced  in  the  New  York  legislature 
authorizing  the  head  of  the  Fire  Department  of  IJie  city  of  New  York  to  pension 
certain  old  or  lisabled  fire  horses.  Some  persons  and  firms,  we  are  glad  to  say, 
adopt  a  similar  policy.  This  is  true  of  Ginn  and  Co.,  the  publishers,  and  doubt- 
less of  others  whose  names  are  unknov/n  to  us.  A  step  in  this  direction  has 
been  taken  by  the  Boston  Elevated  iJailway  Company.  We  are  confident  that  the  time 
is  coming  when  the  sale  of  an  old  or  disabled  horse  will  be  abhorrent  to  the  com- 
munity. 

THE  FUTURE  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

Beside  what  sums  are  obtained  from  tlie  publication  of  advertisements  in  the 
catalogue,  the  Association  has  no  receipts  except  gifts ;  and  after  every  parade  there 
has  been  a  deficiency.  The  officers  render  their  services,  which  in  some  cases  are  ardu- 
ous, without  any  compensation;  and  it  is  hoped  that  those  citizens  of  Boston  who  love 
horses,  and  who  derive  pleasure  or  profit  from  the  use  of  them,  will  contribute  accord- 
ins  to  their  means. 


FIFTH  ANNUAL  PARADE. 


THE  STABLE  COMPETITION. 


N  January,  1907,  at  the  suggestion  of  a  leading  Boston  truckman,  a  stable 
competition    was    begun,  and  this  has  opened  a  field  for  usefulness  which, 
the  directors  hope,  will  be  availed  cf  very  largely  in    the    future.      Tho 
y,    y.   u|.       benefit  to  an  owner  of  having  his  stable  inspected  from  time  to  time  by 
\^gT        coiupetenl    men    whose    observations  will  be  kept  secret,  except  from  him, 
^^    I       are  obviously  great.     The  plan  required  that  entries  should  be  made  prior 
to  January  1,  and  that  the  stables  should   be    open   to    inspection   by   the 
judges  at  such  hours  and  as  often  as  they  might  think  necessary  up  to  May  first.   Tliis 
competition  was  restricted,  for  the  year  1907.  to  persons  or  firms  whose  main  business 
vras  the  use  of  horses,  excluding  owners  whose  use  of  horses  was  incidental  to  their  main 
business.     It  is  intended  in  1908  to  have  a  stable  competition  open  to  all  stables  where 
work-horses  are  kept,  and  divided  like  the  parade,  into  as  many  classes  as  may  be  ex- 
pedient. 

Among  the  points  to  be  considered  by  the  Judges  were  quality  and  quantity  of  hay 
and  grain  fed,  bedding,  grooming,  blankets,  character  of  stalls,  ventilation,  cleanliness 
of  stable  and  hay-loft,  sanitary  condition  of  stable,  and  last,  but  not  least,  the  character 
of  the  men  in  charge  of  the  horses.  The  design  was  to  consider  the  construction  and  me- 
chanical arrangements  of  the  stable,  but  to  lay  more  weight  on  the  management  of  the 
stable;  that  is  to  consider  the  facilities  as  important,  but  to  consider  as  still  more  im- 
portant the  use  which  the  proprietor  and  his  men  made  of  the  facilities  at  their  com- 
mand. 

The  result  of  this  competition  and  of  independent  investigations  made  by 
several  of  the  directors  is  astonishing  in  some  respects.  It  appears  that  many  men 
who  have  owned  and  used  horses  for  years  do  not  yet  know  the  nature  of  the  animal. 
In  former  catalogues  we  have  refrained  from  stating  any  rules  as  to  the  care  of  work- 
iiorses,  thinking  that  they  would  be  superfluous  •,  but  the  reader  who  is  interested  in  the 
f-.ubject  will  find  printed  nn  ])ago  12  of  this  catalogue  tho  points  of  a  Good  Stable  and  the 
points  of  a  Bad  Stable. 

On  the  other  hand,  it  is  a  pleasure  to  state  that  in  many  cases  the  Judges  in  the 
stable  competition  found  the  management  to  be  excellent, — sometimes  nearly 
perfect.  The  prizes  will  be  awarded  at  the  annual  parade,  and  they  are  all  well  de- 
served and  highly  honorable  to  the  recipients.  In  one  case,  two  men  being  thought 
equally  worthy  of  first  prize,  a  first  prize  is  given  to  both.  The  prizes  are  awarded  as 
follows : — 


TRUCKMEN. 

STABLES, 

First  Prize,  W.  C.  BRAY. 
Second  Prize,  R.  J.  ELDER. 
Third  Prize,  R.  A.  KENNET1\ 


Rrst  Prize,  EVERETT  P.  McINTIRE,  of  W.  C.  Bray's  Stal)l('. 

First   Pri/.e,  WILLIAM  ALEXANDER,  of  Whipple  &  Co/s  Soi.icrville  Stal)l. 

Stcond  Prize,  WILLIAM  W.  DICKSON,  of  R.  J.  Elder's  Stable. 

EXPRESS  CLASS. 
No  prizes  awarded. 

CONTRACTORS. 

STABLES. 

Firs  I  Prize,  JOHN  H.  SULLIVAN,  Brighton. 
Second  Prize,  HENNESSY  BROTHERS,  I'.rcokliiio. 


First   Prize,   LAWRENCE   SULLIVAN,  of  John  H.   Sullivan's  Staljle. 
Second  Prize,  PATRICK  McCLANE,  of  Honnessy  Brothers'  Stable. 

The  Judges  for  the  stable  competition  were  Mr.  Ccorge  W.  Harrington  and  Mr. 
Maurice  B  Conway  for  the  Truckmen's  class,  and  Mr.  W.  D.  Quimby  and  Mr.  Arthur 
Perrin  for  the  Express  and  Contractors'  classes.  These  Judges  have  put  themselves 
to  great  inconvenience,  and  have  performed  rlieir  duties  in  a  very  conscientious  and 
thorough  manner.  The  stables,  though  widely  scattered,  were  often  inspected,  and 
every  detail  was  carefully  looked  into  and  considered.  The  Directors  take  this  oppor- 
tunity to  thank  these  gentlemen  for  their  genovous.  faitliful.  and  efficient  service. 

RIBBONS  AND  MEDALS. 

Every  entry  which  is  thonglit  worthy  of  l)eing  in  the  parade  will  receive  something. 
The  hordes  will  be  distributed  in  classes,  as  in  previous  years,  according  to  the  bus- 
iness in  which  they  are  used,  and  the  only  competition  will  be  between  the  horses  in 
each  class.  In  each  class  so  many  ribbons  will  be  awarded  as  there  are  entries;  but 
these  ribbons  will  be  divided  into  four  grades,  equal  or  nearly  equal  in  number,  name- 
ly, first,  second,  third  and  fourth.  Each  entry  in  a  class  will  be  graded  and  assigned 
to  the  first,  second,  third  or  fourth  grade,  and  \\:!1  be  given  a  rililwn  accordingly;  blue 
for  the  first,  red  for  the  second,  yellow  for  tlie  third,  white  for  the  fourth.  These 
ribbons  are  intended  to  be  the  property  of  tlie  drivers.  Dii|)lieates  will  be  furnished  to 
theowners,  at  the  cost  price,  if  the>^are  applied  lor. 

In  addition,  a  handsome  brass  medal,  properly  marked,  will  he  given  to  each  win- 
ner of  a  blue  ribl)on.     Those  medals  are  intended  to  be  attached  to    the    harness    and 


worn  every  day  as  a  permanent  decoralioti;  ;u)d  they  are  eagerly  sought  and  highly 
piized.  The  medal  belongs  to  tlic  owner  of  the  horse,  and  it  will  be  considered  a  breach 
of  Jaith  if  he  attaehi'--  a  medal  to  any  horse  e\cept  the  one  to  whom  it  was  awarded. 

CERTIFICATES. 

In  addition  to  tlic  ribbons,  certificates  will  l^e  given  to  those  drivers  whose  horses 
appear  serviceably  sound  and  in  good  condit'on  and  spirits,  provided  that  they  have 
been  driven  continuously  by  the  same  driver  for  at  least  a  year  before  the  date  of  en- 
try; and  provided,  also,  that  a  certificate  to  this  effect,  signed  by  the  owner,  was  filed 
with  the  entry  blank. 

The  provision  as  to  the  length  of  time  during  which  the  horses  have  been  driven 
must  be  true  of  each  horse  in  the  team,  if  there  are  more  than  one,  except  that  in  the 
case  of  a  four-horse  team  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  have  been  driven  by 
liio  driver  for  one  year. 

A  horse  shall  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  lie  goes  sound  and  breathes  sound. 

These  certificates  have  nothing  to  do  with  the  ribl)ons.  A  horse  may  be  eligible 
for  a  ribbon,  although  the  driver  is  not  eligible  for  a  certificate, 

CertiKcates  are  not  awarded  where  owner  and  driver  are  one  and  the  same  person. 

SPECIAL  PRIZES. 

Beside  the  Lawrence  Gold  Medal  offered  by  the  Association  for  the  best  four-horse 
team,  driven  and  cared  for  by  the  same  man,  there  are  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold 
and  silver  medals  and  sums  of  money  offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse,  and 
other  classes  by  the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  An- 
imal?, American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Eescue  League  (the  home  for 
dogs),  "Red  Acre  Farm  (the  home  for  horses),  Mrs.  John  0.  Sha\A-,  Miss  Julia  H. 
Worthington,  Mrs.  A.  G.  Merwin.     These  will  be  found  specified  in  the  entry  list  below. 

DRIVING  COMPETITION. 

A  driving  competition  for  four  and  six-in-hand  teams  will  be  held  in  a  vacant  lot 
on  0.-  near  Commonwealth  Ave.,  while  the  judging  is  taking  place.  Entries  for  this 
competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first  prize  will  be  a  silver  medal.  If 
this  proves  to  be  a  success  additional  competitions  in  driving  vn]\  be  held  next  year. 

U    S.   MAIL  CARRIERS. 

This  year  for  the  first  time  a  class  is  made  for  the  Mail  Carriers  and  Mail  Dis- 
tributers who  use  horses  in  the  Boston  District,  of  whom  there  are  about  thirty-five. 

These  men  receive  as  a  horse  allowance  only  $300  a  year,  and  as  this  sum  was  fixed 
when  the  price  of  horses,  hay  and  grain  was  mucli  less  than  it  is  now,  tlie  sum  is  wholly 
insufiicient. 

ITie  men  hope  to  receive  an  increase  for  this  allowance  of  $100  a  year,  and  the 
Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association  will  endeavor  to  assist  them  in  the  matter. 


METHOD  OF  JUDGING. 

It  is  the  duty  of  the  Judges  to  exclude  from  the  parade  any  horse  that  is  thin, 
lame,  sick,  out  of  condition,  dock-tailed,  or  in  any  way  unfit  for  work. 

'J'lie  value  of  a  horse  does  not  count  so  much  as  his  condition. 

Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse.  The  older  the  liorse,  the  higiier  will  he  be  graded, 
provided  that  his  condition  is  good. 

Ihe  Judges  are  instructed  not  to  give  hr.st  prizes  or  blue  ribbons  to  green  horses. 

As  between  two  horses  equal  in  all  other  respects,  including  age,  the  prize  should 
go  to  the  better  horse. 

No  first  prize  or  blue  ribbon  should  be  awarded  to  a  horse  unless — allowing  for 
the  imperfections  of  age — he  is  a  horse  of  good  type. 

Docile  and  gentle  manners  will  be  considered,  a?  showing  that  the  horse  has  been 
kindly  treated. 

Color  Avill  not  count  even  in  respect  to  matched  teams. 

The  value  or  newness  of  the  harness  will  not  count;  l)ut  tlie  harness  must  he  com- 
fortable, well-fitting,  and  not  unnecessarily  lieavy. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by  reason  of  his 
collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in  the  harness.  Throat- 
latcjies  too  tight,  and  inside  reins  too  long,  m  the  case  of  pairs,  are  also  common  de- 
fects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  l)ut  strong  enougli  to  do  the  work  required  of  it,  is  preferred 
to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in  respect  to  bridles  and 
ether  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required.  Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings, 
tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments  should  not  be  used. 

Tlie  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association  and  sliown  in  a  photograph  printed 
in  ibis  catalogue  weighs  only  53  pounds,  collar  and  all,  and  it  is  big  enough  for  the  aver- 
age 1350-pound  horse.  TTorses  of  that  weight  frequently  carry  a  harness  weighing  70 
or  80  pounds.  '^I'ho  l)ridlc  shown  in  the  photograph  weighs  less  than  two  pounds, — about 
half  the  usual  weight. 

The  vehicle  will  not  be  considered,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  or  otherwise 
unsuitable  for  the  horse  or  for  the  work  in  which  he  is  used,  would  disqualify  the  en- 
try. New  harness  and  new  vehicles  are  not  absolutely  prohibited,  but  exhibitors  are  re- 
quested not  to  use  them.    This  is  an  exhibition  of  horses  and  not  of  wagons. 

Horses  must  be  shown  in  the  same  manner  in  which  they  are  regularly  worked  in 
all  respects,  including  vehicles,  harness,  and  number  of  horses  in  a  team.  For  ex- 
emple,  a  horse  regularly  used  in  a  pair,  cannot  be  entered  as  a  single  horse. 


10 


NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS. 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the  reviewing 
stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon  of  hi^h  grade  to  a  par- 
ticular horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing  stand  at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight 
lameness  would  not  be  disclosed,  whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the 
horses  were  shown  to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls 
under  the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  always  apparent,  frequently  exclude  a 
fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  hor.ors.  It  should  be  remembered,  too,  that 
in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse,  and  green  horses  are  discriminated 
against. 

THE   JUDGES, 

If  the  principles  upon  which  the  prizes  are  awarded  be  kept  in  mind,  the  Asso- 
ciation believes  that  there  will  be  very  little  dissatisfaction  with  the  decisions  of  the 
Judges.  Increasing  care  lias  been  taken  each  year  in  the  selection  of  them,  and  the  As- 
sociation is  confident  that  its  Judges  now  form  a  band  of  men  as  competent  and  im- 
partial as  could  be  secured.  Their  arduous  and  difficult  services  are  rendered  without 
ccuupensation,  although  many  of  them  come  from  distant  points,  and  the  Association 
hereby  expresses  its  gratitude  for  their  generous  assistance. 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE. 


Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  night  cool  and 
breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or  if 
the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar  and  saddle. 

Horses  well  brushed,  if  dry. 

Feet  washed,  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  horses  wiped  all 
over  with  a  wet  sponge  on  coming  in. 

Horses  giv-en  a  little  water,  but  not  much, 
on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.  (In  any  case 
watered  twice  after  coming  in  at  night.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night;  cool  in 
summer,  hot  in  winter. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Cobwebs  swept  down. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie  with 
heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  grating  in  the 
upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  and  not  a 
drinking  man. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for  the 
man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all  —  Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing  hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  cleaning, 
or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no  mat- 
ter how  hot ;  or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating  their 
hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night  and 
horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  —  too  much  trouble. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Stable  full  of  cobwebs. 

Harness  unclean :  sweat  allowed  to  ac- 
cumulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up  dirty. 

Stable  close  —  no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the  horses' 
heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  evening 
and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge  : 
no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Worst  of  all  —  Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about ;  general  atmosphere  of  noise 
and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out  or 
put  up. 


12 


Ohieif    Marshal 
FRANCIS    PEABODY,    Jr. 


Randolph  K.  Clauke 

Arthur  Perrin 

Joshua  Atwood,  3rd 

Austin  Peters,  M.  R.  C.  V.  S. 

John  H.  Jewett 

Carl  H    Jewell 

Charles  Nelson  Shuri  lekf 


.     .    AIDS     .    . 

Harry  W.   Soule 
Richard  M.  Heckscher 
Wm.   D.  Quimby 
Harry  Boyd 
Charles  L.  Burrill 
Harry  A.  Frothingham 


Thomas  Frothingham 
Louis  F.  Gavet 
Thomas  H,   Ring 
John  F.  Waters 
Lyman  O.  Shurtleff 
Arthur  Blake 
Arthur  Gilbert  Merw 


VETERINARY     rNSPECTOR 

Dr.  frank  J.  SULLIVAN 


Robert    Taylor 


USHERS 

J.    F.    Whitney 


A.   L.   Berry 


JUDG 

BAKER,  GEO.  M. 
BAKER,  JAMES  E. 
BARNES,  DR.  W.  E. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BROOKS,  J.  I 
BROWN,    HOWARD 
BUNKER,    DR.    MADISON 
CONWAY,   M.  B. 
COOPER,  ESAU 
COLDWELL,    ELIAS    F. 
COPLEY,    A.    H. 
CRAMPTON,  GEO.  A. 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 
DUFFILL,  J.  H. 
DUMMER,  R.  G.  ^ 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 

ELDREDGE,  F.  S. 

FELLOWS,  ALBERT 
FENELON,  PATRICK  C. 
FIELD,  HORACE 
FITCH,  DR   A.  H. 

GILLIGAN,  JAMES  T. 

HARDING,  RUSS.  W. 
HOFFMAN,  E.  H. 

JEWELL,  CARL  H. 
JOHNSON,  ARTHUR  R. 
KENNETT.  R.  A. 
KENNEY,  J    R. 
KEOUGH,  DR.  DANIEL  P. 
LABAW,  DR.  W.  L. 
LANGLAN,   THOMAS 

13 


EIS 

LEE,  DR.  GEO.  H. 
LIBBY,  W. 
MACK,  THOMAS  W. 
MANLEY,  LOWELL 
MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MERWIN,  A.  G. 
McKENNEY,  [AMES 
McMANUS,  H.  P. 
MURPHY,  JEREMIAH 
PARKER,  AUGUSTIN  H. 
PEPPER,  CHAS.  H. 
PETERS,  H.  M. 
PETTIGREW,  J.  A. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 
PIERCE,  GEO.  W. 
RING,  THOMAS 
ROBBINS,  FRANK 
ROBINSON,   A.  G. 
ROBINSON.  J.  E. 
ROBINSON,  N.  T. 
ROLLINS.  DR.  J.  H. 
RYDER,  W.  H. 
SMITH,  LEWIS 
SOUTHER,   DR. 
STUART,    GEO. 
SULLIVAN,  DR. 
SULLIVAN,  J.  H. 
SWINDERMAN,  J. 
W^ADSWORTH,  DR.  S.  F. 
WALES.  S.  WALTER 
WHEELER,  L.  E. 
WRIGHT,    HARRY  E. 


H. 
E. 
F.J. 


OONXRIBUXORS 


R.  L   Agassiz 

C.  W.  Allen 

Mrs.  Wm.  R.  Ames 

American  Humane  Education  Society 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Miss  May  P.  Bacon 

Gen.  Wm.  A.  Bancroft 

Walter  C.  Baylies 

E.  Pierson  Beebe 

Franklin  H.  Beebe 

Mrs.  J.  Arthur  Beebe 

A.  S.  Bigelow 

Mrs.  Arthur  W.  Blake 

Peter  C    Brooks 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  B.  Bryant 

Stephen  Bullard 

C.  A.  Campbell 
Samuel  Carr 
Mrs.  Theodore  Chase 
Eliot  C.  Clarke 
Henry  M.  Clarke 
Mrs.  John  Storer  Cobb 
Miss  Clemence  Crafts 
Geo.  C.  Crocker 
Frederic  Cunningham 

Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dvvight 

.<F" 

Fells  Ice  Company 

Frederic  P.  Fish 

Mrs.  Reginald  Foster 

Mrs.  Edw.  Frothingham 

Edward  W.  Grew 

Robert  C.  Hooper 
Mrs.  John  E.  Hudson 
Mrs.  George  Abbott  James 
Mrs.  Charlotte  Kennard 
Mr.  &  Mrs    Chas.  A.  Kidder 
G.  Otto  Kunhardt 

Amory  A.  Lawrence 
John  Lawrence 


Mrs.  R.  Ashton  Lawrence 

Joseph  Lee 

Miss  Helen  Loring 

Miss  A.  F.  Manning 

F.  H.  Manning 

Mass.  Society  for  Prevention 

of  Cruelty  to  Animals 
Mrs.  A.  G    Merwin 
Maj.  W.  L.  Mitchell 
Miss  Madeline  Mixter 
John  T.  Morse,  Jr. 
Dr.  Henry  Lee  Morse 

The  Misses  Parsons 

Miss  Winifred  Peikins 

F.  A.  Peters 

Mrs.  J.  C.  Phillips 

D.  L.  Pickman 

A.  E.  Pillsbury 

Mrs.  Sarah  G.  Putnam 

Mrs.  A.  W.  Ramage 

Red  Acre  Farm 

Miss  Katherine  Roosevelt 

Richard  M.  Salionstall 
Mrs.  Florence  A.  Sanborn 
Montgomery  Sears 
Francis  Shaw 
Mrs.  J.  O.  Shaw 
Miss  Blanche  Shimmin 
Miss  Roxana  Stackpole 
Mrs.  Daniel  Stanitord 
Mrs.  Robert  S.  Sturgis 
Henry  W.  Swift 

Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer 
Mrs    Charles  Thorndike 

Miss  Elizabeth  J.  Ward 
Samuel  D.  Warren 
Benjamin  W.  Wells 
George  Wigglesworth 
Ralph  B,  Williams 
Miss  Julia  II.  Worthington 


mmmmm.mQmm^m^.mm&.mmmm&mmmmmmmmmmmmm 


14 


LIST     OF    ADVEIR-riSEIRS 


AUnutt,  F.  G. 
American  Basket  Co. 
American  Trust  Co 
Atwood  &  McManus 

Bain  Bros.  Co. 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Bartels  >.^  Phillipps 

Boston  Badge  Co. 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

Bowker,  John  R. 

Baker  e^  Co  ,  Walter  (limited) 

Berry,  C.  &  Co. 

Boston  Mollasses  Co 

Boston  Suburban  Express  Co. 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co. 

Ble-wett.  Ilenrv 

Blinn.  Morrilf^  Co. 

Bliss,  A.  T.  &  Co. 

Break,  Joseph  eS:  Sons  (corp.) 

Brigham,  C.  Co. 

Butler,  C.  .S:  Co. 

Capillo,  C.  &  Co. 
City  Laundry 
Coblenzer,  Paul  G. 
Connor,  John  T. 
Chase  Express  Co. 
Chase,  L   C.  &  Co. 
Cronon  &  Foss 
Columbia  Road  Stable  Co. 
Collins,  James  &  Co. 
Creamer-Wing  Laundry  Co. 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 
Doherty,  Michael  &  Co. 
Downes  Lumber  Co. 
Dunn,  Patrick 
Dver,  L.  M.  &  Co. 
Drake  Bros    Co. 
Elder,  R.  J. 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 
Eldridge,  Baker  &  Co. 
Excelsior  Laundry  Co. 


40 
3« 
79 
34 

44 
64 
66 
68 
60 
70 
7S 
42 
44 
72 
^2 

64 
64 
30 
78 
46 
46 
46 

74 
24 
3S 
56 
6S 
70 
62 
78 
70 
42 

36 
46 
79 
62 
60 
74 
74 


80 


Fells  Ice  Co. 

76 

Felkin,  A.  C.  &  M.  L. 

,"^8 

Ferguson,  J.  G.  &  B.  S. 

54 

Fox,  George  G.  &  Co. 

78 

Forgie,  James  &  Sons 

66 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 

56 

Ginn  &  Co. 

7^ 

Gilligan,  Wm. 

.54 

Goldberg  &  Rathman 

18 

Hazen  Confectionery  Co. 

80 

Harris,  E.  S. 

68 

Higgins,  W.J. 

46 

Howard,  W.  B. 

76 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co. 

56 

Hovev.  C.  F.  eV  Co. 

28 

Hood,  HP.  &  Sons 

80 

Homer,  George  E. 

70 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

34 

Kennett,  R.  A. 

42 

London  Harness  Co. 

52 

Lownev,  Walter  M.  Co. 

40 

Locke  Coal  Co. 

60 

Loney,  W.  J. 

Maiden  Electric  Co.  & 

Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Light  Co. 

66 

McCormack,  Daniel  F. 

36 

McKennev  &  Waterbury  Co. 

36 

McCall,  F.  H. 

54 

McGreevey  &  Co. 

78 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

22 

Metropolitan  Laundry 

76 

Miller,  John  &  Co. 

62 

Monarch  Typewriter  Company 

80 

Morse,  Eugene  S. 

42 

Morgan  &  Bond 

56 

Newcomb,  J.  S.  &  Co. 

52 

Nevens,  M.  A.  Co. 

64 

O'Brien,  Thomas  J. 

68 

Parker,  S.  G.  Co. 

64 

Packard,  J.  D.  &  Sons 

40 

Perry,  Lewis  F.  &  Whitney  Co. 

26 

Pierce.  S.  S    Co. 

20 

Plant,  Thomas  G    Co. 

16 

Porter.  C.H. 

38 

Priest  &  Smith 

48 

Proctor  Bros. 

i2 

Pureoxia,  The  Co. 

62 

Richardson,  ].  H. 

38 

Richardson.  R.  C. 

74 

Roessle  Brewery,  The 

44 

Robinson,  W.  M. 

36 

Rovye,  A.  A.  &  Sons 

44 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

48 

Scully,  John  T.  &  Brother 

60 

Seam  an  s.  Manning 

78 

Sears.  Altred  &  Co. 

52 

Shurtletf,  Mrs.  S.A. 

79 

Siegel  Co.,  Henry 

30 

Smith,  A.  A 

76 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

72 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co. 

Sulliyan,  John  H. 

Talbot,  J.  C. 

58 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry  Inc. 

30 

Tighe,  J.  T.  Co. 

38 

Tighe,  T.  &  Sons 

40 

Tutts,  Nathan  &  Sons 

58 

Upham's  Cor.  Stable  Co. 

66 

Union  Glass  Co. 

64 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 

62 

Walker,  J.  G.  .V  Sons 

48 

Waterhouse,  L.  A. 

62 

Wetherbee.  J.  O.  Co. 

70 

White,  R    H.  Co. 

56 

Whittemore.  W.  P. 

76 

Wheeler,  McElyeen  eV  Co. 

60 

Whipple  &  Co. 

28 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 

48 

Windsor  Mineral  Spring  Co. 

79 

Woods,  John  M.  &  Co. 

54 

Woodberry,  B.  S. 

44 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

36 

15 


THE   HOME  OF 

"QUEEN  QUALITY  " 


I  ^  3 1 4  3  5  J 


y' 


^F-- 


.-^3 


THE  PLANT  FACTORY  ALONE   NOW   PRODUCES  ONE-FOURTH 


AS  MUCH  SHOE  VALUE  AS  THE  ENTIRE  CITY   OF   BROCKTON, 


ONE-THIRD    AS    MUCH    AS    THE    CITY    OF    HAVERHILL,    AND 


ONE-FOURTH  AS  MUCH  AS  THE  CITY   OF   LYNN,  THE   THREE 
GREATEST    SHOE    PRODUCING    CITIES    IN    THE    WORLD. 

THOMAS  G-  PLANT  COMPANY 

Boston,  Massachusetts 


SOLD  IN  BOSTON  BY  JAMES  A.  HOUSTON   COMPANY 

16 


VETERAN   DRIVER  CLASS* 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society,  through  Geo.  T.  Angell,  Esq.,  offers 
a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous 
time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer,  or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer. 
In  addition,  the  Association  will  give  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in 
this  class  (the  prize  winner  excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


Years 

of 
Service 


JAMES  McCarthy 

p.  J.  COUGHLIN 
NORRIS  CURRIER 
JAMES  H.  LEAKER 
PHILLIP  CAREY 
JAMES  McLEAN 
WILLIAM  E.  DENVIR 
CHARLES  MOORE 
ROBERT  K.  PATTERSON 
JOHN  COFFEY 
JOHN  WELCH 
GEORGE  C.  LIENHARD 
JOHN  J.  BURNS 
PETER  F.  DOLAN 
PATRICK  CALLAGHAN 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
FRANK  H.  SPINNEY 
STEPHEN  S.  BANGS 
SOLON  J.  RICHARDSON 
G.  M.  BARTON 
JOH\  FRANCIS  KELLEY 


P.  Dunn  &  Co. 

20 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

21 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

22 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

23 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

23 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

24 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

24 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

24 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

24 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

25 

Webster  &  Co. 

25 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

26 

City  of  Boston,  Sanitary  Dept. 

26 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

28 

Wilson  Bros. 

30 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

30 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

32 

Sanderson  Baking  Co. 

32 

City  Laundry  Co. 

33 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

34 

R.  O.  Brigham 

42 

The  Veteran  Driver's  prize  was  won  in  1904  bv  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the  Metropolitan 
Coal  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years;  in  1905  by  Thomas  Haley,  an  employee  of 
the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.,  with  a  record  of  forty  years;  in  1906  by  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by 
the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation  for  38  years;  in  1906  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  the 
W.  T.  iV:  A.  G.  Van  Nostrand  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years. 


17 


ALFRED   II.    RATIIMAX  Telephone,  Richmond  2023,  2024,  202: 


GOLDBERG  I  RATHMAN 


Importers,    Exporter^'   and  Dealers 


NEW  AND  OLD 


Metals  and  Rubber 


MANUFACTURERS    OF 

SPELTER,  LEAD,  SOLDER,    BABBITT 
and  TYPE    METALS 


SKIMMINGS,  GROSSES,  COPPER  BEARING  MATERIAL.  BALATA,  GUTTA  PERCHA 

AND  MANILLA  ROPE 


Cable  Address  ''ALECKS     Licbers  Code.     A.  B.  C.  Code  4th  <n,d  ^l/i  Edt. 
Private    Code. 


28^  to  293  COMMERCIAL  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


18 


CLASS   1— OLD  HORSES 


The  prizes  in  this  class  will  be  awarded  to  the  horses  in  the  best  condition,  age  ami  length 
of  service  considered.  Horses  entered  in  this  class  are  not  eligible  for  any  other  class.  To  be 
eligible  to  this  class  horses  must  liave  been  owned  and  used  by  the  person  making  the  entry,  or 
by  bis  predecessor  in  business,  for  ten  years  or  more,  and  must  be  in  active  service  at  the  time 
of  making  the  entr\-.  Tliis  class  is  not  ojien  to  horses  owned  by  cities  or  towns.  The  class  is 
so   large  this  year  that   it   is  divided   into  three  divisions,  the  oldest  horses  coming  last. 

The  medals  and  ribbons  awarded  in  this  class  are  to  be  the  property  of  the  owner,  but  the 
money  goes   to  the   driver. 

DIVISION   A 
P'irst  Prize:    Silver  Medal  ottered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 
Second  Prize:    Five  dollars,  ottered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Third  Prize:    Five   dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Fourth  and  Fifth  Prizes  :    Three  dollars  each,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  tlie  Judges  may  award  so  many  -'Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes  of 
one  dollar  each,  as  thev  mav  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER  S    NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horses 
Age 

Years 

of 
Service 

I 

J.  M.  McEnany 

Joseph  A.  McDonald 

Dinney 

H 

10 

2 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

John  Anderson 

Peggy 

20 

10 

3 

Edw.  A.  Sears 

Wm.  J.  Morrissey 

Grace 

24 

10 

4 

The  Hoyt  Co. 

F.  W.  B.  Lockhart 

Ben 

24 

10 

5 

Tighe  &  Burke 

Harry  T.  Metally 

Roger 

iS 

10 

6 

A.  M.  Davis 

Edwin  P.  Hudson 

Baby 

17 

10 

7 

Manning  Seamans 

Robert  J.  Minnis 

Dollie 

16 

10 

8 

H.  W.  Murphy 

Harry  T.  Leary 

Dick 

16 

II 

9 

Sylvanus  S.  Burning 

Judson  Doyle 

Blackie 

iS 

II 

lO 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Robert  Royce 

Billy 

17 

II 

II 

E.  S.  Morse 

Henry  McGonigle 

Old  Jim 

18 

II 

12 

E.  S.  Harris 

Joseph  Harris 

Dan 
Tom 

16 
15 

II 

13 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Sumner  R,  Starbird 

Ben 

19 

II 

H 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry  Inc. 

John  Bibber 

Dick 

31 

12 

15 

Maiden  Electric  Co. 

John  W.  Silliker 

Robbin 

21 

12 

16 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Daniel  Cantello 

Baby 

.9 

12 

19 


London  Mixture 

Breakfast  Tea 


Better  than  Coffee 
Richer  than  Coffee 

Seven-Eighths   Coffee 


rOStCr  S   RPANH 


BRAND 


Bass'  Ale 
Guinness'  Stout 


The  Largest  Bottlers  in  the  World  of 
BASS'  ALE 

The    Best    and    Most    Careful    Bottlers    of 
GUINNESS'  STOUT 


S.  S.  PIERCE  CO.,  Agts.,   Boston 


20 


CLASS  I— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION    A— (Continued) 


No. 

of 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

ol 
Service 

17 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

Manley  West 

No.  9 

20 

12 

iS 

Paul  G.  Coblenzer 

John  Doherty 

Major 

^7 

12 

19 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

James  H.  Leaker 

Jim 

20 

12 

20 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

James  McLean 

Lizzie 

iS 

12 

DIVISION   B 

In  this  Division  the  following  prizes  are  offered  : 
First  Prize  :  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 
Second  Prize  :   Five  dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  John  O.  Shaw. 
Third  Prize  :  Five  dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  John  Q.  Shaw. 
Fourth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended"  ribbons 
dollar  each,  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


with  prizes  of  one 


23 

24 

25 
26 

27 
28 

29 
30 

V 

32 

33 
34 
35 
36 
37 
38 
39 


J.  C.  Talbot 

H.  H.  Bradford 

C.  H.  Nichols  &  Brother 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Edwin  L.  Snow 

James  C.  Smith 

Sanderson  Baking  Co. 

Creamer- Wing  Latmdry 

Arthur  V.  Pettengill 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Allen  A.  Smith 

John  Miller 

John  L.  Duffley 

E.  S.  Morse 

Martin  J.  Hickey 

Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 

McGreevey  &  Co. 

Hennessv  Bros. 


Joseph  Rowell 
G.  S.  Hull 
T.  B.  Hassett 
Walter  S.  Lockhart 
Edward  Capias 
Harry  Miller 
Patrick  Sullivan 
Stephen  S.  Bangs 
Louis  D.  Abbott 
Charles  H.  Kraft 
Merton  Fortune 
Steven  Fallon 
Myles  McPartlin 
Neil  F.  Duffley 
Christopher  Seaver 
Frank  Bailey 
Asa  H.  West 
Thomas  A.  McGreevey 
Daniel  J.  Hennessy 


Annie 

Roonev 

19 

Bill 

26 

Kate 

18 

Tom 
Jim 

20 

Joe 

33 

Tommy 

22 

Prince 

30 

Prince 

27 

Topsy 

30 

Jack 

34 

Fanny 

32 

Daisy 

21 

Harry 

18 

Tom 

2T 

Old 

Nigger 

31 

Billy 

38 

Old  Gray 

23 

Frank 

30 

Noble 

32 

Charlie 

^3 
13 
13 
H 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
15 
16 
16 
16 
16 


•21 


METROPOLITAN  COAL  CO. 

30  CONGRESS  ST.,    -    -    BOSTON 


22 


CLASS    1  — OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION   C 

First  Prize  :  Gold  Medal,  offered  by  the  Mass.  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  Animals. 
Second  Prize  :   Five  dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  John  O.  Shaw. 
Third  Prize  :  Five  dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  John  O.  Shaw. 
Fourth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  "the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons,  with  prizes  of  one 
dollar  each,  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Prize 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 
Service 

40 

42 

Boston  Sanitary  Dept.  Div.  3 

(Not  in  Competition) 

Boston  Fire  Dept. 

(Not  in  Competition) 

Metropolitan  Laundry  Co. 

John  Green 

James  McTiernan,  Jr. 

E.  Gavin 

Senator 

Fatty 

Darling 

Jane 

35 

25 
24 

29 
19 
17 

43 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Wm.  L.  Garrity 

Billy 

34 

17 

44 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

James  Shea 

Charlie 

32 

17 

45 

The  Atlantic  Works 

Charles  E.  Simonds 

Paddy 

22 

17 

46 

Edwin  Troland 

John  A.  Carr 

Dick 

24 

iS 

47 

W.  C.  Bray 

Fred  Far  re  11 

Peggy 

23 

18 

48 

A.  M.  Davis 

Edwin  P.  Hudson 

Floss 

24 

18 

49 

Geo.  Parker 

Alexander  Frazier 

Baby 

34 

18 

50 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Patrick  Donovan 

Polly 

24 

19 

5  ^ 

Wm.  Corbett 

Samuel  Corbett 

Fanny 

25 

19 

52 

Martin  Godvin 

Mai'tin  L.  Godvin 

Ned 

26 

19 

5.3 

John  H.  Fitzpatrick 

Thomas  Goodrow 

Baby 

26 

19 

54 

Whittemore-VVoodbury  Co. 

Jos.  Dumas 

Spider 

23 

19 

i     '' 

VVinslow  H.  Dodge 

Herbert  S.  Dodge 

Dolly 

37 

20 

i     56 

Newton  Cemetery  Corp. 

Patrick  Callaghan 

Pony 

White 

Face 

24 

20 

57 

Josephine  Belcher 

Arthur  A.  Belcher 

Huckleberry 

27 

20 

5S 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Charles  A.  Brown 

Tom 

25 

21 

59 

Joseph  M.  Nover 

Jos.  Martin  Nover 

Jack 

28 

21 

1    60 

Webster  &  Co. 

John    Welsh 

Sally 

27 

21 

61 

:  J.  0.  Wetherbee  Co. 

James  J.  Porter 

John 

28 

21 

;    6ia 

i 

*Charlie 

19 

12 

*The  horse  Charlie  will  be  judged  in  Division  A. 


•23 


If  our  Horses  please  you 
Try  our  Laundry  Work 


COLLECTIONS  MADE  IN 

ROSLINDALE,  DORCHESTER,  SO.  BOSTON, 
BROOKLINE,  BACK  BAY  and  CITY 


I 


f 


A 


TELEPHONE,  283   ROXBURY 


CITY    LAUNDRY 

C.    N.    iC-  F.    A.    CUNNINGHAM,   Proprietors 


82  to  98  WEST   LENOX  STREET 


24 


CLASS  2  — FIRE  DEPARTMENT 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Three  ists  ;  three  2d>  :  two  3ds 


No. 

oi 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

63 

Boston  Fire  Depr. 

Dennis  J.  B;iiley 

I 

63 

11              U               t  I 

Geo.  P.  Smith 

2 

64 

;;     .. 

Andrew  J.  Htirley 

3 

65 

u             ..              .. 

Ivan  Mahoney 

3 

66 

11         Ik          (I 

Eugene  C.  McCarthy 

3 

67 

Boston  Protective  Dept. 

Geo.  E.  Durbeck 

2 

6S 

Medford  Fire  Dept. 

W.  Burton  Harvey 

2 

69 

Somerville  Fire  Dept. 

Charles  N.  Craig 

3 

CLASS   3  — U.   S.   LETTER  CARRIERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved,  and  the  Association 
offers  a  special  prize  of  five  dollars  for  the  best  horse. 


70 
71 

72 

73 
74 
75 
76 

77 
7S 

79 
So 
81 

S3 

83 
S4 


Edward  J.  Baker 
Edward  W.  Beal 
Thos.  CaHahan 
Thomas  G.  Connors 
James  P.  Carlan 
Thomas  N.  Dunican 

(This  driver  in  service  over  34  years) 

A.  S.  Fallon 
Wm.  George 
Henry  F.  Johnson 
S.  J.  McNeilly 
Artliur  P.  Ottavvay 
Herbert  R.  Sumner 
Chas.  H.  Shepard 

(Thi,  horse  is  27  years  old.) 

Charles  A.  Stevens 
John  F.  Riley 


General  P.  O. 
Dorchester  Centre  P.  O. 
Roslindale  P.  O. 
Dedham  P.  O. 
Maiden  P.  O. 
Dorchester  P.  O. 
West  Roxbury  P.  O. 
West  Roxbury  P.  O. 
South  Boston  P.  O. 
Chestnut  Hill  P.  O. 
Somerville  P.  O. 
Brookline  P.  O. 
Dorchester  P.  O. 
General  P.  O.,  Boston 


25 


Tie  LEWIS  F.  PERRY  &  WHITNEY  CO. 


S' 


ilntrrtnr 


^ 


DRAPERIES,  WALL  PAPERS,  WALL  HANG- 
INGS, FURNITURE,  CARPETS,  DECORATIVE 
PAINTING,  PLAIN  PAINTING,  PAPIER 
MACHE,    FURNITURE    COVERINGS 
^  RUGS  ==^-  — 


s/ry 


TELEPHONE  MAIN  6640 


9^ 


8  Bosworth  St.,  BOSTON 


26 


CLASS  4  — CITIES  AND  TOWNS 

PARK,   BRIDGE  AND  WATER  DEPARTMENTS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :   Five  ists  ;  three  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

85 

City  of  Boston  —  Water 

Dept. 

James  Murphy 

86 

4.                        tt 

John  Barry 

S7 

a                              n 

Michael  Ronan 

ss 

n                              a 

Thomas  Williams 

'89 

u 

Patrick  Farris 

I    • 

90 

ii.                                    u 

Jeremiah  McLaughlin 

91 

i. 

Michael  Hines 

92 

" 

Mathew  Nolan 

2 

93 

" 

James  J.  Connors 

2 

94 

(i                              <; 

Michael  Burke 

2 

95 

"                Bridge  Dept. 

John  J.  Green 

I 

96 

Park  Dept. 

Jeremiaii  Cronin 

2 

97 

.; 

a 

Thomas  Connell 

2 

9S 

It                       ti 

u 

John  Morrissev 

2 

CLASS  5  — STREET  AND  SANITARY  DEPARTMENTS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Four  ists  :  three  2ds  :  two  3ds  :  two  4ths. 
In  this  Class  Benjamin  W.  Wells,  Fire  Commissioner,  formerly  Street  Commissioner,  offers  a  special 
prize  of  ten  dollars  for  the  best  old  horse,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


99 

City  of  Boston — Sanitary 

Dept. 

Wm.  Doherty 

.100 

k                           a 

John  H.  Finnity 

lOI 

t 

Patrick  D.  Monahan 

102 

t                           »t 

Richard  J.  Landy 

103 

. 

John  Conlon 

104 

i                           11 

Samuel  Blair 

105 

' 

Phillip  J.  McLaughlin 

106 

. 

John  L.  Sullivan 

107 

'                 Street 

John  Conroy 

108 

'               Sanitary 

Patrick  Toomey 

109 

'                        " 

John  B.  Carr 

27 


C.  F.   HOVEY  &   CO. 

IMPORTERS  AND  RETAILERS  OF 

DRY     GOODS 


Sole   Agents    for   Boston   for   the   Celebrated  • 

Alexandre  Kid  Gloves 

MKDALS    AWARDED   THE    MANUFACTURERS   AT 
EVERY     WORLD'S     FAIR 

3  3  Summer  St.      .'.      42  Avon  St.,  Boston 

Established  1855  Telephone,  739  Oxford 

WHIPPLE  &  COnPANY 

H.    M.    PUTNEY 

TRUCKMEN 

OFFICE: 

1 66  Essex  Street,  Boston 


STANDS: 

Corner  Lincoln  and  Tufts  Sts  Corner  Pearl  and  Purchase  Sts. 

69  Chauncy  St.  Hilton  Place. 

218   Purchase  St. 

28 


CLASS  6— BARREL  RACKS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award    such  ribbon  as  is  deserved,    and  the  Association  offers 
special  prize  of  five  dolhxrs  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon     Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No 

of 

Horses 


iio         John  W.  Whitney 


John  W.  Whitney 


CLASS  7  — HUCKSTERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Six    ists  ;  five  2ds  :    four  3ds  ;   four  4ths. 
The  Association  offers  a  special  prize  of  five  dollars  for  the  best  Old  Horse  in  the  class. 


1 1 1 

I  12 

114 

116 
117 
118 
119 
120 
131 
123 
133 
134 

136 
137 
128 
128a 


W.  A.  Bemis 
Wm.  G.  Burrows 


A.  R.  Campbell 
John  J.  Coiley 
Wm.  F.  Costello 
Albert  C.  Faul 
T.  Ford 

Charles  M.  Howe 
Charles  M.  Howe 
James  H.  McKenna 
Nealon  &  Burns 


James  H.  Nolan 
Michael  F.  O'Hara 
Otto  E.  Zaugg 


W.  A.  Bemis 
Louis  Dress 
Wm.  J.  Burrows 
Michael  Coakley 
A.  R.  Campbell 
John  J.  Coiley 
Wm.  F.  Costello 
Michael  F.  Murphy 
T.  Ford 

Dennis  J.  Donavan 
Hugh  McKenna 
Charles  Murphy 
Peter  F.  Leary 
Charles  L.  Sloane 
Joseph  B.  Burns 
Wm.  Abner  Hutchins 
Dennis  Nolan 
Francis  U.  Croak 
Martie  Lee 


29 


New  England's  Largest,  Best 

Lighted  and  Best  Ventilated 

RETAIL  STORE 


A  PLEASANT  PLACE  TO  SHOP 


HENRY  SIEGEL  CO 


BLINN.  MORRILL 
I  COMPANY 

truckmen 


No.   6   CHATHAM    ROW 

AND 

1  13  FRANKLIN  STREET 

BOSTON 


Taiflof  Bros.  Laundry,  loc, 


LAUNDERING 


AT 


STANDARD  PRICES 


Telephone   1  005   Dorchester 


COLUMBIA  SQUARE ...  DORCHESTER 


30 


CLASS  8  — LAUNDRY 

P^or  convenience  in  Judging  this  Class  is  divided  into  two  divisions. 

DIVISION   A 
In  this  Division  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Nine  ists;  eight  2ds  :  five  3ds  ;   five  4ths 


No. 

of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


129 
130 

132 

134 
135 
136 

137 

I3S 

139 
140 
141 
142 

H3 
144 

H5 
146 
147 
148 
149 
150 
151 
152 
153 
154 
155 


City  Laundry 


Creamer  Wing  Laundry  Co. 


Eaton  Towel  Supply  Co. 
Foster  Currier  Laundry  Co. 


James  H.  Lundergai 
Joseph  A.  Lutz 
Edward   J.  Reardon 


Frank  H.  Ames 
John  D.  MacKay 
Norman  Sias 
Henry  Barnard 
Frank  Wells 
Solon  J.  Richardson 
Harry  F.  Upham 
Daniel  MacLeod 
James  O'Brien 
William  H.  Paterson 
O.  P.  Creamer 
Wm.  G.  Kiniry 
Frank  H.  Spinney 
p.  j.  coughlin 
G.  M.  Barton 
Arthur  B.  Pierce 
John  F.  Baker 
John  J.  Reardon 
Thomas  F.  Reardon 
Arthur  H.  Kneeland 
Edward  F.  Dardis 
W.  Harry  Rockwell 
Joseph  E.  Studley 
Winfield  T.  Brown 
James  H.  Lundergan 
Joseph  A.  Lutz 
Edward  J.  Reardon 


;3'1 


CLASS  8  —  LAUNDRY  —  Continued 


DIVISION   B 

In  this  Division  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Eight  ists  ;  six  2ds  ;  four  ^ds  :  four  4ths 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

156 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

John  B.  Fay 

157 

Michael  J.  Duran 

Michael  J.  Duran 

158 

Excelsior  Laundry  Co. 

L.  A.  Fiske 

159 

.. 

Bert  Holbrook 

160 

11               ii            .i 

Benjamin  J.  Matfis 

161 

a                 ii,              a 

Charles  Sullivan 

162 

D.  J.  Kelleher 

Daniel  J.  Riley 

163 

Metropolitan  Laundry 

W.  L.  Phillie 

164 

" 

B.  E.  Hinckley 

165 

u 

H.  C.  Plottner 

166 

- 

William  Sibley 

167 

.. 

Frank  E.  Jepson 

2 

168 

(1                         11 

Edward  Gavin 

2 

169 

Taylor  Brothers  Laundry  (Inc.) 

Wm.  L.  Snow 

170 

Ci                            il                            11                            (.(. 

Wm.  Hawkes 

171 

u 

Benj.  L.  Gardner 

173 

ii                        ii                        U                        ti 

Samuel  D.  Bibber 

173 

H                            >.i                            li                           44 

John  Davis 

174 

a                            11                            (I                            44 

John  Kilorin 

175 

t»                            .4                            H                            44 

Justin  A.  Guilmartin 

176 

I.                            (.i                            14                            44 

Alfred  Miller 

177 

4.                            44 

John  M.  Bryant 

33 


Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

The  Mercantile  Heart  of  New  England 


HEADQUARTERS  FOR 


Horse  Clothing,  Whips,  Crops 

CARRIAGE  and  AUTO  ROBES 


Our  Standard  Always  the  Highest 

Our  Prices  Absolutely  the  Lowest 

Our  Stock  Always  the  Largest 


ESTABLISHED    1841 


I  P.  STfli  &  CO. 

Manufacturers  of 

Magons,  Caravans 
anb  Slebs 

CARRIAGE   PAINTING 

REPAIRING  IN  ALL    BRANCHES 


k 


I 


|]5  mil  l]9  m  m  Sint 

SOOlll  BOSTON 


MANUFACTURERS  OF  ALL  KINDS  OF 


WOODEN  BOXES 
PACKING  CASES 
and  KINDLING  WOOD 


TELEPHONE    CONNECTION 


FACTORY  AND  OFFICE: 

Carter  Stfeet  and  Foui  Slreet 

CHELSEA,    MASS. 


34 


CLASS   9  —  DELIVERIES  -Miscellaneous 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Six  ists  ;   five  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths 


Wo.         No. 

of           of 

Ribbon    Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horses 

178 

George  Adams 

Arthur  Griffin 

I 

179 

George  Adams 

Edward  Navarro 

I 

I  So 

Boston  American 

Timothy  Corcoran 

I 

iSi 

- 

C.  L.  Grace 

1 

182 

a 

Charles  Fay 

I 

183 

" 

J.  Treanor 

I 

184 

11 

J.  G.  Walker 

I 

185 

" 

F.  J.  Eastman 

I 

1 86 

a 

Michael  Tirk 

2 

187 

Commonwealth  Hosp.  for  Anima 

s  Harry  Bixby 

I 

188 

Michael  J.  Coughlan 

Michael  J.  Coughlan 

I 

189 

Estabrook  &  Eaton 

Charles  E.  Rogers 

I 

190 

H.  B.  Gould 

Jeremiah  Crowley 

I 

191 

Louis  Jesselsohn 

Henry  McKenzie 

I 

192 

C.  M.  xMandell  &  Co. 

John  M.  Gildred 

T 

193 

Penn  Floral  Co. 

Thomas  E.  O'Connell 

2 

194 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

William  B.  Loud 

I 

CLASS    1 0  —  DELIVERIES  —  Department  Stores 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Eight  ists  :  six  2ds  ;  four  3ds  ;  four  4ths. 


196 
197 

198 
199 
200 
201 


C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co.  John  J.  Dwyer 

"  James  H.  Padden 

"  George  C.  Lienhard 

(This  horse  took  the  Silver  Medal  in  the  Old  Horse  Class  in  1906) 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co.  William  E.   Denvik 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  Daniel  McDonald 

"  John  Murray 

"  James  Coyle 


35 


DBVIEL  F.  PIGGORWGK 

(practical  Iborse  Sboer 


TELEPHONE,    DORCHESTER    796-1 


1 


Dorchester  Ice  Compafiy 


523  COLUMBIA  ROAD 
DORCHESTER 


KENNIY^'W^rERBURY  (bMPANT, 


DORCHESTER 


W.  M.  ROBINSON 

Iba^,  (3iain 
anb  poultry  jfoob 

ADAMS  AND  PARK  STREETS 
DORCHESTER 


\V.  H.  YOULDEN 


J.  H.  SMITH 


T.   G.    HOPKINS 


mm,  SMITH  & 


s 


MOVERS  OF 


Safes  and  Machinery 

TEAMING  OF  ALL   KINDS.     RIGGING   WORK  A   SPECIALTY. 


Office,  ^71   ATLANTIC  AVENUE 


TELEPHONES:    134   MAIN,    135   MAIN 
36 


CLASS  10  — DELIVERIES  — Department  Stores  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 
•  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


303         Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

203  " 

204  " 

205  " 

206  " 

207  '• 
208 

209  Henry  Siegel  Co. 

210  " 

211  " 

212  " 
213 

214  " 

215 

216  " 


Jeremiah  O'Leary 
Daniel  Moylan 
William  Deegan 
James  Hagerty 
John  L.  Lockney 
Augustus  B.  York 
Thomas  Lonergan 
John  C.  Wilson 
John  McCarthy 
Maurice  J.  Burns 
Joseph  McQuaid 
Thomas  Barrett 
Joseph  Kelly 
John  Adams 
John  Teehan 


CLASS   U— EXPRESS 

In  this  Class   the  Judges   may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :    Nine    i&ts;    seven   2ds :   four  3ds  :  four 
4ths.     The  Association  offers  a  Special  Prize  of  five  dollars  for  the  best  horse  in  this  Class. 


217 
21S 
219 
220 
221 
222 
323 
224 
225 
226 


John  J.  Buckley 
Jacob  Bierweiler 
Chase  Ex.  Co.,  Brookline 


Carter-Russell  Co. 
M.  D.  Crafts 
Geo.  R.  Dean 


John  J.  Buckley 
Louis  C.  Bierweiler 
Thomas  W.  Taylor 
Thomas  F.  Sullivan 
John  W.  Eagan 
Edwin  T.  McKay 
Charles  S.  Kerr 
Geo.  L.  Callahan 
Judson  W.  Smith 
Francis  A.  McDonald 


Compliments  of 

J.  H.  RICHARDSON 


Corner  PITTS  and  SOUTH  MARGIN  STREETS 

BOSTON,  MASS. 
STOCK  FARM,  ANDOVER,  MASS. 

TELEPHONES:  ROXBURV  1266-2  DORCHESTER  28-1 

PAUL  G.  COBLENZER 


j       ji      I     A        I  BITUMINOUS 


620-622  SHAWMUT  AVE. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

Branch:  Dorchester  Coal  Co.,  Bernard  St.,  Dorchester 


J,  T,  IIGHE  COMY 

T   GRADES 

AND  STEAM    UUAL 


FAMILY 


LOWEST  CASH    PRICES 
Telephone  156  South  Boston 


WHARF 
YARD 


-  First  Street,  Foot  of  F 

-  331  West  Fourth  Street 


SOUTH  BOSTON 


Compliments  of 


Porter's  Market 

i^i  SUMMER  STREET 
BOSTON 


Telephone,   612   Richmond 


Hmerican  JBaeket  Co. 

BASKETS 
STRAWBERRY  CRATES,  ETC. 


^^?^ 


16  FULTON  PLACE 


BOSTON 


38 


CLASS    1 1  —  EXPRESS  —  Continued 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


227 
22S 
229 
230 
231 
232 
23.3 

235 
236 

237 
238 

239 
240 


VVinslow  H.  Dodge 
Joseph  L.  Fisher 
Howe  &  Co. 

W.  B.  Howard 

Wm.  A.  Keen 
Machelo  Marino 
Michael  J.  McLoughlin 

a  ((  (( 

C.  G.  Parmenter 
F.  W.  Pavitt 
Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 
Joseph  Thompson 

(This  horse  \^  on  tlie  Gold 


Edgar  Hazlett 
Fred  Hunter 
Clyde  W.  Steeves 
Richard  J.  Elliott 
Geo.  E.  Eaton 
Robert  Clementz 
Wm.  O.  Seaward 
Bennie  Cornetta 
Michael  J.  McLoughlin 
Harry  E.  Younker 
Fred  F.  Dolaher 
F.  W.  Pavitt 
Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 
Joseph  Thompson 

Medal  in  the  Old  Horse  Class  in  1906) 


CLASS   12  — MILK 

For  convenience  in  Judging,  this  Class  is  divided  into  two  divisions. 

DIVISION  A 
In  this  Division  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :    Seven  ists  ;   live  2ds  ;  four  3ds  ;  four  4ths. 


241 
242 

243 
244 

245 
246 

247 

24S 

249 


R.  O.  Brigham 

Ehn  Farm  Milk  Co. 


John  F.  Kelley 
Curtis  H.  Latfin 
Harry  Collins 
Abner  B.  Greeley 
Howard  White 
Joseph  Breen 
James  Phelan 
Elias  R.  Hudgins 
Albert  Moses 


39 


UiE&»   JD 


& 


GEN  ERAL 
TEAMSTERS 


DEALERS  IN 


FIRST  QUALITY 

Carriage 

Horses 

EXCLUSIVELY 


Hig:h=class  Saddle  and  Harness  Horses,  carefully 

selected,  thoroughly  acclimated,  perfectly  mannered, 

and  ready  for  immediate  city  use. 


36  ATLANTIC  AVENUE 

Telephone  Connection 
ORDER  BOX,  ROOM  911,  EXCHANGE  BUILDING 


Telephone,  226  Haymarket 


n  CHARDON  STREET,     BOSTON 
BRIGHTON  AVENUE,       ALLSTON 


F.G.ALLNUTT 


^ 


DEALER   IN 


Provisions 

FISH  AND  OYSTERS 
FRUIT  AND  VEGETABLES 


4sf 


AGENT  FOR 

KATAHDIN  SPRING  WATER 
6  Boylston  St.,  ■  Cambridge 

Telephone  Connection 


"Name  on  Every  Piece" 

FOR   BUYER'S    PROTECTION 

CHOCOLATE  BONBONS 


The  materials  are  used  just  as  Nature 

intended  them  to  taste. 

No  Chemistry  in  Lowne3''s. 

That  is  why  they  are  so  delicious. 


Retail  Store,  416  Washington  Street 

ARTIFICIALLY   COOLED    IN    HOT  WEATHER 


40 


CLASS    1 2  —  MILK  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

250 

H. 

P. 

Hood  &  Sons 

Wm.  J.  McCullough 

I 

251 

Martin  Lanigan 

2 

252 

J.  M.  Weeks 

I 

253 

W.  W.  Downey 

I 

254 

P.  0.  Melanson 

I 

255 

W.  A.  Howard 

I 

256 

B.  A.  Chute 

I 

257 

A.  H.  Gibbs 

I 

258 

L.  N.  Perry 

2 

259 

George  H 

Noone 

Wm.  H.  Noone 

I 

260 

u 

" 

" 

Harmon  F.  Noone 

I 

DIVISION 

B 

In  this  D 

ivision 

Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Seven  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  3ds 

four  4ths. 

261 

c. 

Br 

igham  Co. 

H.  L.  Phillips 

I 

262 

Geo.  W.  Swinimer 

I 

263 

Anthony  Wachendorf 

I 

264 

Eli  B.  Dinsmore 

I 

265 

Joshua  Clough 

2 

266 

Thomas  Dickson 

I 

267 

Robert  E.  Colter 

2 

268 

Papk 

ee  Brothers 

Robert  Paul 

I 

269 

;( 

u 

James  R.  Laird 

I 

270 

D 

Whitin 

g  &  Sons 

Xavier  Tromblay 

2 

271 

Edward  H.  Everton 

I 

272 

William  Greaves 

2 

273 

A.  J.  Bibbey 

I 

274 

Wm.  J.  Burke 

I 

275 

Herbert  C.  Kennett 

I 

!  276 

J.  W.  Crosby 

I 

277 

Waldron  Hamilton 

I 

278 
279 


Clayton  E.  Everton 
Sumner  R.  Starbird 


41 


is  a  perfect  food  as 
wholesome  as  it  is 
d  e  1  i  c  i  o  u  s — h  i  gh  1  y 
nourishing,  easily  di- 
gested, fitted  to  repair 
wasted  strength,  pre- 
serve health,  and  pro- 
long life. 

Be  sure  that  you 
get  the  genuine, 
bearing  our  trade- 
mark on  every  can. 


A  "7  HIGHEST  JUJUJiRDS  IM 
*r/   EUROPE andJtMERICJt 

Walter  Baker  ^  Co.  Ltd 


Established 
1780 


Dorchester,  Mass. 


EUEEI S. 


DEALER  IN 


COAL 


199  iOFORO  STREET,  BOSTON 

OPPOSITE  EVERETT  STREET 

CHARLESTOWN    DISTRICT 


Telephone 


CHARLESTOWN  136 


Creamer  Wing 

Laundry  Company 


R.  A.  KEiETT 


truckman 


AND 


59  WEST    NEWTON    STREET 

Telephone,  Tremont  108 


3forwar5cr 


5  NORTH  MARKET  ST.,  BOSTON 

Telephone,  78  Bichmond 


42 


CLASS  13— PROVISIONS 


LIGHT  HORSES 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Six  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  jds  ;  four  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

280 

Frederick  G.  Allnutt 

Wm.  E.  Frances 

281 

Joseph  Beane 

Joseph  Beane 

282 

Charles  M.  Bixby 

James  L.  Thompson 

2S3 

B.  S.  Cole 

Marshall  B.  Hall 

2S4 

L.  M.  Dyer  &  Co.  (Inc.) 

James  H.  Moore 

285 

((                    K 

Manuel  Strauss 

286 

u 

Thomas  F.  Murphy 

287 

J.  F.  Heald 

Thomas  E.  Killion 

2S8 

H.  W.  Murphy 

Thomas  Coffey 

2S9 

((              (I 

Watson  H.  Armstrong 

290 

ii.                    u 

Fred  DtCorsey 

291 

James  H.  Niles 

Frank  Leo  Niles 

292 

J.  S.  Newcomb  &  Co. 

Fred  Burhank 

293 

Wm.  J.  Fapouleas 

T.  A.  Fapouleas 

294 

Andrew  Ronald 

Andrew  Ronald 

294a 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

G.  Fred  Seamon 

294b 

a                      a 

John  Bradshaw 

29=^ 

James  F.  Weir 

Fred  E.  Weir 

(This  horse  took  the  Gold  Medal  in  the  Old  Horse  Class  in  1905) 

CLASS  14  — PROVISIONS 

HEAVY  HORSES 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Five  ists  :  three  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths. 


296 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

NoRRis  Currier 

I 

297 

a                  u 

Wm.  E.  Mumford 

I 

298 

a                  a 

George  C.  Benson 

I 

299 

Joseph  Beane 

Guy  Humphreys 

I 

300 

A.  P.  Chadbourne 

Gust  Samson 

2 

301 

John  L.  Duffley 

Richard  P.  Duffley 

I 

43 


D.  S.  WOODBERRY 
..Truckman,, 


310  ATLANTIC  AVENUE,  BOSTON 


BAIN  BROTHERS  CO. 

mUbolesale 
^^  6rocer8  ^=^ 


240  MILK  STREET,  BOSTON 


Tclcplionc,   I  lavniarket  No.  491   and   492 

C.  BERRY  &  CO. 

Importers  and  Wholesale  Dealers  in 

Wines  and  Liquors 

BOTTLERS  OF  LAGER,  ALE  AND  PORTER 

Proprietors  of  Berry's  Diamond  Wedding  Rye  and  Bourbon  Whiskey 

84  to  88  Leverett  St.  and  2  to  8  Ashland  St. 

BOSTON,   MASS 

A.  A.  RowE                                                            A.  H.  RowE 
Telephone  Main  1767  

A.  A.  ROWE  &  SON 

Forwarding  Agents  and  Trackmen 

CUSTOM 

32  India  Wharf, 


CUSTOM  HOUSE  BROKERS 


BOSTON 


THE  BOESSLE  WM 

PREMIUM  LACER  BEER 

IN  WOOD  OR  BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  -MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  highest  type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Qiiality,  Age,  Substance, 
Purity  and  Aroma,  and  is  Absolute  Perfection. 


ESTABLISHED    1846. 


OFFICE,   BREWERY  AND  BOTTLING   DEPARTMENT: 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE  -  BOSTON 


44 


CLASS   14  — PROVISIONS  — Continued 

HEAVY  HORSES 


No. 

No. 

of 

cf 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No 
o 
Ho 


302 

304 
305 
306 

307 
30S 

309 


Fernald  &  Co. 
Wm.  D.  Halward 
T.  F.  Heald 


Alfred  Sears 
Augustus  S.  Spieg-el 
B.  S.  Snow  &  Co. 


Joseph  Durgin 
Wm.  D.  Halward 
John  E.  Logan 
P.  J.  Rutledge 
Thomas  P.  Carroll 
Wm.  H.  Sears 
Frank  Ryan 
M.  J.  Day 


CLASS  J  5  -  BAKERS,  —  SINGLES 

For  convenience  in  judging,  this  Class  is  divided  into  two  Divisions. 

DIVISION  A 
In  this  Division  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Seven  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  3ds  :  four  4ths 


311 

313 

313 

3H 
315 
316 

317 
318 
319 
320 
321 
322 
323 
324 


Henry  Blewett 


Drake  Bros.  Co 


Sanderson  Baking  Co. 


U  (( 


Cyrus  DesRoches 
Cyrus  Gaudet 
Phillip  Perry 
Dana  Higgins 
F.  L.  Curtis 

E.  J.  Smith 

A.  H.  Robinson 
C.  E.  Stevens 
A.  D.  Roberts 

F.  W.  Gardner 
C.  A.  McKenna 
Briah  A.  Connor 
Stephen  S.  Bangs 
Nicholas  M.  Fox 


45 


OF  EVERY  KIND. 

Implements,        c^^^=, 
TEtEPMo^      Machines,  ^^^^^^ 
RICHMOND  1660  Woocleiiware. 

(INCORPOHATEO) 
51  AND  52    IMORTM  MARKET  STREET.  BOSTON. 


MorcantlJe.  ^^i-icultur/il.  Uorficalfural. 

TKUiPIIONt:   UICIl.    16SO 


M.  DOIIEKTV 


H.  A.  DOHERTY 


MICHAEL  DOHERTY  k  CO, 


Importers  and 


(Uboksale  Ciquor  Dealers 

Sole   Importers  and   Proprietors  of  the 

CELEBRATED  BRANDS 

Royal    Dutch    Gin,   Imperial  Cognac   Brandy 
and  Golden  Sheaf   Rye  Whiskey 

184  to  192  Kneeland  Street  \    o^^-rr^iv, 
765  to  771  Atlantic  Avenue  j    »0^'t»IN 


W.J.  HIQQINS 

llinporters  ant) 
.  .  (Broccre  .  . 

128-134  Emerson  Street 

SOUTH    BOSTON 

C  BUTLEP  &  CO. 

TrucKnien 


rorwarders 

245  PuiTliase  Sfreer,  liOSTOM 

Telephone  720.  Main 


C.  Brigham  Company 


WHOLESALE    AM)    RETAIL    DEALERS    IN 

MILK,  CREAM  and  BUTTER 


158  Massachusetts  Avenue,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


Telephone,  262  and  263  Camh. 


46 


BAKERS  SINGLES  — Continued 

DIVISION    A— (Continued) 


Wo. 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Bo. 

of 

Horses 

325 

Sat 

derson  Baking  Co. 

CM.  Perry 

326 

- 

Thomas  M.  Coonan 

327 

a                            IC                    ii 

Stanley  R.  Banks 

328 

i;                   it             u 

Geo.  F.  McMahon 

329 

ii                  a            i; 

Harold  Hutchinson 

DIVISION  B 

In  this  Division  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :    Five  ists ;  three  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths 


330 
331 
3^2 

333 
3^.4 
335 
336 
337 
33S 
339 
340 
341 
342 
343 


Austin  Biscuit  Co. 


Rednor  P.  Coombs 
Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 


Oak  Grove  Farm  Creamery 


John  T.  McCarthy 
Joseph  F.  Collins 
Joseph  M.  Meaney 
Rednor  P.  Coombs 
Alfred  E.  Morris 
Robert  R.  Paterson 
Louis  E.  Bishop 
Wm.  Hillian 
James  J.  Welch 
Francis  J.  Gallant 
E.  D.  Moynihan 
T.  E.  Tagme 
Geo.  M.  Carpenter 
Louis  H.  Lipshultz 


CLASS  16— BAKERS  (Doubles  and  Fours) 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


344 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

Wm.  H.  Vaughan 

2 

345 

Austin  Biscuit  Co. 

Patrick  Gillespie 

2 

346 

u                  n 

Edmund  U.  Driscoll 

4 

Our  Hilk 

Is    obtained    from    farms    in  New 
England.     The  cows  are  clean  and 
healthy,    the     cow     stables     well 
lighted  and  ventilated;  the  milk   is 
promptly    cooled    and    shipped   in 
refrigerator  cars  by  special   train. 

Tiios.  j.  Pe<ik.st                              James  T.  Smith 

PRIEST  &  SMITH 

BOARDING,    BAIT= 
ING,  LIVERY   AND 
SALE     S7ABLE 

Our  Bottles 

are  not  only  washed  but  sterilized, 
and  are  tilled  bv  sanitary  apparatus. 

Deliveries  Made  in  Boston  and 
Suburbs  and  Nantasket. 

David    Whiting    &    Sons 

Tel.,  245  Charlestown 

First  class  Horse  Shoe- 
ing,   also    Clipping    by 
Electricity 

68  to  74  Northampton  St. 

TELEPHONE,  325  ROXBURY 

Established  1850 

J.  Q.  WALKER  &  SON 

SHATTUCK  &  JONES 

CORPORATION 

^^^^ 

CHICAGO    and     N.   Y.    CITY 

Dressed  Beef 

TELEPHONE 

128  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

36    NORTH    STREET 

BOSTON,     MASS. 

48 


CLASS   17  — CONFECTIONERS 


In 

this  C 

ass  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  t 

oilow 

s  :    Five  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  two  3ds  ;  two  4ths. 

No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

347 

Fred  A.  Barber 

Fred  A.  Barber 

I 

348 

M.  Frediani 

Ulysses  Frediani 

I 

349 

Hazen  Confectionery  Co. 

Robert  R.  Loomer 

2 

350 

il                               <(                        u 

Thomas  W.  Tobin 

I 

351 

ii                                       it                              !.(. 

Frank  J.  Smith 

2 

352 

Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

Thomas  Youatt 

I 

353 

u 

J.  A.  Greene 

I 

35^ 

li                      il. 

H.  M.  Ball 

I 

355 

ii                      u 

Thomas  Dunn 

I 

356 

"                         u 

Calvin  Leightzer 

I 

357 

u                        i; 

Marion  B.  Patten 

2 

35S 

" 

George  Wilson 

3 

359 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

Edward  Twohig 

I 

CLASS  18  — GROCERS 

SINGLES 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  mhy  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Seven  ists  ;  five  2ds  ;  three  3ds ;  three  4ths. 


360 

Bain  Bros.  Co. 

361 

((                  C(              IC 

362 

Eldridge,  Baker 

363 

i(              (( 

364 

W.  J.  Furbush 

365 

J.  E.  Moran 

366 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

367 

U                ii            u 

368 

((            11         ii. 

James  A.  Fitzgerald 
Harry  H.  Bacon 
Wm.  Stewart 
John  Dimond 
Douglass  D.  Furbush 
Charles  Foster 
Frederick  L.  Allen 
W'm.  J.  Cogan 
Edward  Higgins 


49 


GROCERS  —  Singles  —  Continued 


Ho. 

of 

Ribbon 

Wo. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Wo. 

Of 

Horses 

369 

Allen  A.  Smith 

M.  Driscoll 

.370 

a                    u 

John  J.  Hughes 

371 

;(                    (( 

Carl  Grimes 

372 

P.  Shea 

M.  J.  Shea 

373 

Manning  Seamans 

John  Curran 

374 

J.  C.  Talbot 

Fred  Preston 

375 

u 

George  Tucker 

376 

Warren  F.  Witherell  Co. 

Daniel  Gallivan 

377 

Wood  Pollard  &  Co. 

Henry  W.  Laskey 

CLASS  19- 

GROCERS  (Doubles) 

In  this  C 

lass  the  Judges  mav  award  such 

ribbons 

as  are  deserved. 

378 

Eldridge  Baker  Co. 

J.  S.  McAdams 

2 

379 

Geo.  D.  Emerson 

Daniel  E.  Duggan 

2 

3S0 

R.  B.  Harding 

Wm.  R.  Sanderson 

2 

382 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Clarence  H.  Jones 

2 

383 

a              a 

John  Hartford 

2 

384 

Allen  A.  Smith 

Arthur  Lewis 

2 

3S5 

Wood  Pollard  &  Co. 

Frank  T.  Guilfoyle 

2 

CLASS  20  — GROCERS   (Fours  and  upward) 


In  this  class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


386 

S.  s. 

Pierce  Co. 

387 

u 

a 

388 

u 

u 

389 

(( 

(( 

390 

" 

ii. 

Patrick  Carney 
Daniel  Singleton 
Timothy  Driscoll 
Patrick  Donahue 
Charles  W.  Smith 


51 


J.  S.  NEWCOMB 


G.    M.  D.   LEGG 


J.  S.  NEWCOMB  &  CO. 

Wholesale  and    Retail  Dealers   in 

Beef,  illon,  Lart,  Veal 

AND  POULTRY 

Basement,  4  Quincy  Market     -    -     Boston,  Mass. 

TELEPHONE,  RICHMOND  220 


1)0tcl  and  Restaurant  Supplies 

ALFRED  SEARS  &  CO. 


DEALERS   IN 


MUTTON,  LAMB,  VEAL,  BEEF,   PORK  »1 

AND    POULTRY  |^ 

OUR  SPECIALTIES  ^Jl 

Calves'  Livers,  Head  and  Feet,  Sweet  Breads,  Lambs  Fries 


TEL.  CAM.  85 


BUSINESS  EST.    1867 


PROCTOR  BROTHERS 

WHOLESALE  AND    RETAIL 

Graio,  Hay,  Straw  M  Feefl 

CRAIGIE'S  BRIDGE,  EAST  CAMBRIDGE 


15  Tancuil  l^all  market  3  Taneuil  f)H\\  Square 
and  M  merchants  Row   BOSTON,  MASS. 

COMPLIMENTS  OF... 


IMPORTERS  OF   PEAT  MOSS 

E.    R.    LOVELL,    Mgr 


GEO,   O.   PROCTOR,    Prop 


JOHN   HANCOCK  BUILDING 

116  Devonsliire  and  2]  to  29  Federal  Streets 


Boston  Suburban  €xpre$$ 
and  Parcel  €o. 


mitl  In  I  Dills  ol 


ARLINGTON  IXJRCI  ULSTER 

AUBURNDALE  EAST  BOSTON 

BRT)OKLINE  MALDEN 

CAMBRIDGE  MEDFORD 


CHELSEA 


NEWTON 


NEWTON   CENTRE 
NO.  CAMBRIDGE 
SOMERVILLE 

WEST  NEWTON 
WINTHROP 


WRITE,  CALL  OR   'PHONE  FORT  HILL  420.     EXPRESS  TELEPHON  E  SERVICE. 


36    BROAD   STRKET 


52 


CLASS  21— FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Five  ists  ;  three  2ds  :  two  3ds  ;  two  4th 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


393 
394 

395 
396 
397 
39S 

399 
400 
401 
402 


S.  S.  Hirshberg 
]ames  R.  Jones 


A.  Levine 
John  Murphy 


Bernard  Deich 
David  Blair 
Wm.  Tanner 
Charles  Hudson 
Meyer  L.  Levine 
Charles  E.  Webber 
"  "  Henry  H.  Rogers 

Chas.  McDowell  John  Bronkhorst 

The  Lewis  F.  Perry  &  Whitney  Co.   Edward  Murray 
"  "  "  "  "       George  W.  Murray 

"  "  "  "  "      Wm.  A.  Cutting 

"  "  "  "  "      Wm.  H.  Matthews 


CLASS  22  — MANUFACTURERS  (Singles) 

[n  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


403 
404 

405 
406 
407 
40S 
409 
410 
411 
412 


Atwood  &  McManus 
American  Basket  Co. 
Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 
Ginn  &  Co. 

International  Glue  Co. 
McKenney  &  Waterbury 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 
Union  Glass  Co. 


Edward  W.  Riley 
John  Cuneo 
Philip  Carey 
Arthur  Dunbrack 
Kenneth  McCharles 
Benedict  J.  Schwarz 
Wm.  E,  Salmon 
G.  W.  Reid 
John  H.  Galvin 
John  J.  Brady 


53 


McCALL,  the   HARNESS  MAN 

353  RUTHERFORD  AYE. 
Get  our  Prices. 


See  our  Stock 


I  S 


J. G.& B.S.Ferguson  Co. 


JAMES  G.  FERGUSON,  Fres. 
BENNETT  S.  FERGUSON,  Treas. 


Custom-made    Collars,    Wood-Tree 
Saddles   and   Hand-Made   Harness 

A   SPECIALTY  = 

Established  1868.  Tel.  384  Charlcstown. 


-  CbeCeading  Bakers  m 

^  > 

w       O  F '^ 

new  England 


Telephone,  209  Roxbury 


WILLIAM  GILLIGAN 

..General.. 
Contractor 


DEALER   IN 

SAND  AND  GRAVEL 


JOHN  M.  WOODS 
E.  D.  WALKER 


CHARLES  H.  SHERBURNE 
W.  E.  CHAMBERLAIN 


TEAMING  AND  EXCAVATING 


Office,  28  Mechanic  St. 


John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 

wjisHARDlOD  LUIBERMiN 

AIR  DRIED  &  KILN  DRIED 

SPECIALTIES : 

MAHOGANY  WHITEWOOD 

QR.  SYCAMORE  CHERRY 

OAK  ASH  WALNUT 

223   to    239    Bridge    Street 

EAST   CAMBRIDGE.  MASS. 
Telephone,   Cambridge   1430 


54 


CLASS  23  —  MANUFACTURERS  (Doubles) 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Eight  ists  ;  five  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths. 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon     Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


413 

Atwood  &  AIcAIanus 

Wm.  Argy 

2 

414 

Fred  W.  Hoey 

2 

415 

Oliver  H.  Marion 

2 

416 

Thomas  Barrett 

2 

417 

Geo.  E.  Nay 

2 

41  s 

John  A.  Campbell 

2 

419 

Joseph  J.  Cronin 

2 

420 

Wm.  A.  Bryson 

2 

421 

Edgar  E.  Bryson 

2 

422 

E.  B.  Badger  &  Sons 

Michael  Twomey 

2 

423 

W.  S.  Burbank  &  Co. 

Frank  FitzPatrick 

2 

424 

Ginn  &  Co. 

Robert  J.  Reid 

2 

425 

H.  J.  Heinz 

Bartholomew  J.  Nagle 

2 

426 

W.  A.  Luce 

John  A.  Kelley 

2 

427 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

John  J.  Griffin 

2 

428 

u                        a 

Richard  R.  Brinkert 

2 

429 

U                                  (( 

Timothy  J.  Harrington 

2 

430 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

John  T.  Stewart 

2 

431 

White  &  Leahy 

Timothy  White 

2 

CLASS  24  — MISCELLANEOUS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  inav  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Six  ists  ;  four  Jds ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths 


432 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

John  Edward  Dempsey                      i 

433 

ti                  a                  a               a 

Jolin  O'Connor                                      i 

434 

a                  a                   n                ii. 

Charles  Moore                               i 

435 

Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

Robert  Dunbar                                     i 

436 

A.  C.  &  M.  L.  Felkin  Co 

A.  L.  Fairbairn                                    i 

M.  FREDIANI  &  SONS 

Wholesale  Dealers  in 

John  T.  Connor 

Fine  Confectionery 

AND    SALTED    NUTS 

2200  Washington  St.,   Roxbury 

^Contractors 

71   PALMER  STREET 

Tel.  749-3  Roxbury                            ROXBURY 

Established  187 1                                   Telephone  1676 

MORGAN  &  BOND 

IMPORTERS  AND  DEALERS   IN 

SamiiBrii  aoii  iiarnajie  Doods 

22  FEDERAL  and  121  CONGRESS  STS 
BOSTON 

G    B.  HOWARD.                                         M.  D.  CKESSY 

G.  B.  HOWARD  &  CO. 
TEAMSTERS 

AND     FORWARDERS 

CLINTON  MARKET.  BOSTON,  MASS. 

R  H.  WHITE  CO. 

IN  THE  MEN'S  STORE,  2d  FLOOR 


OFFER^ 


Complete  Stock  of  Men's  Cloth- 
ing, Shoes,  Hats  and  Furnishings 

AT  THE  LOWEST  PRICES  IN   BOSTON 


66 


MISCELLANEOUS  —  Continued 


NO. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

437 

B.  F. 

Keith 

Maurice  Joseph  Flynn 

438 

Maiden  Electric 

Co. 

Richard  Powers 

439 

Cornelius  Geimman 

440 

Bert  Wright 

441 

Owen  Donahue 

442 

Jos.  Reardon 

443 

Dennis  J.  Buckley 

444 

Jeremiah  Buckley 

445 

Daniel  Foley 

446 

W.  H 

Naler 

Geo. ^Buchanan 

447 

W.  L. 

Sellon 

Frank  L.  Sellon 

CLASS  25  — BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Seven  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  3ds ;  four  4ths. 


448 

Henry  Baron 

4+9 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

450 

" 

451 

C.  Capillo  &  Co. 

452 

a                 a 

453 

a                 u 

454 

Mark  H.  Cobe  &  Co. 

455 

James  Collins  &  Co. 

456 

Doherty  &  Daly 

457 

John  Hartin  &  Co. 

458 

William  J.  Higgins 

459 

"                    " 

460 

Charles  H.  Lally 

461 

John  Miller 

462 

Stillman  Bottling  Co. 

463 

.;                          (; 

464 

a                        a 

465 

Windsor  Min.  Spring  Co. 

466 

u                                tt 

Henry  Baron 
Wm.  Borns 
John  Murphy 
Carmello  Capillo 
Charles  N,  Capillo 
Charles  Capillo,  2nd 
Richard  Murdock 
Patrick  J.  Devine 
Joseph  H.  Doherty 
Patrick  J.  McGrath 
Frank  J.  Higgins 
Joseph  F.  Bird 
Joseph  J.  Cheever 
Robert  F.  Keith 
Joseph  Rocco 
Martin  Prentiss 
David  Pearlman 
Frank  Ford 
John  J.  Casson 


57 


NATHAN  F.  TUFTS 


Established  1841 


CHARLES  E.  FITZ 


NATHAN  TUFTS  &  SONS 

erain,  IHcal.  feed,  ^ 

Ray  and  Straw 


POULTRY  AND  PIGEON   FEED 


I 


Bunker  Hill  Elevator,  ^9  Cambridge  St.,  Charlestown 

Near  East  Somerville  Station,  B.  &  M.  R.  R. 


•icC' 


MAIN  0FF;€^,  WARREN  BRIDGE,  Charlestown.  Mass. 


J.  C.  TALBOT 


FANCY  AND  STAPLE 

(Broccrics 


11^7  WASHINGTON  ST. 
DORCHESTER 


BRANCH  STORE 

ASSOCIATES'  BUILDING 

Established  i8jj. 


MILTON 


A.C.iM.L 


FELKIN 


COIflPANlf 


SIGNS 


OF    EVERY    DESCRIPTION 


BRASS  TEAM  SIGNS 


FOOT  OF  STATE  STREET 


\      PHONE,   574    MAIN 


58 


CLASS  26  — BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Five  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  three  3ds  ;  three  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No. 
oi 
Hor 


467 
468 
469 
470 
471 
473 

473 
474 
475 
476 

477 

478 

479 
480 
481 


The  Atlantic  Works 
Burke  Bros. 

Eastern  Clay  Goods  Co. 
Robert  C.  Guptill 
Arthur  C.  Harvey  Co. 
J.  P.  Mackey 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

C.  H.  Nichols  &  Bro. 
F.  W.  Webb  Manf.  Co. 

John  L.  Wells 

J.  F.  Willett  &  Co. 


Wm.  F,  Dunbar 
Guy  Freeman 
Hugh  McDonald 
Omer  Belanger 
Wm.  A.  McCuish 
Alexander  G.  Templeton 
James  Whalen 
Charles  A.  Remick 
Wm.  Campbell 
T.  Sidney  Griffiths 
Albert  Taylor 
Michael  McGrail 
Wm.  Wilson 
John  L.  Wells 
John  J.  Sullivan 


CLASS  27  — METALS  AND  JUNK 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Five  ists  ;   three  2ds  ;  two  3ds  ;   two  4ths. 


482 

H.  Aronoplcy 

Morris  Schulz 

483 

U                   <( 

Isaac  Gordan 

484 

a            u 

Morris  Aronopky 

485 

Dover  Stamping  Co. 

Daniel  Collins 

486 

S.  Goldfine  &  Sons 

Allen  Goldfine 

487 

Goldberg  &  Rathman 

Harry  Schultz 

488 

n                        n 

Harry  Miller 

489 

u                         n 

Samuel  Lebovitz 

490 

D.  F.  Haley 

D.  F.  Haley 

491 

Morris  Silverman 

Morris  Silverman 

492 

Max  Silverman 

Max  Silverman 

493 

M.  R.  Segall 

Charley  Smith 

59 


John  T.  Scully  &  Brother 

CONTRACTORS 
TEAMSTERS 
PILE  DRIVERS 


. ..  ESTAHLISHEU      I  S66  ... 


Boston 


Cambridge 


LOCKE  COAL  CO. 


Maiden  &  Medford 


Boston    Forge   Co. 

II.\MMKRE])    IRON   AND   STEEL 

FORCINGS 

Office  and  Works  at  BO.STON 

340  Maverick  St.,  East  Boston  MASS. 


A.  S.  Smith,  Pres. 
Thos.  L.  Dunbak,  Treas. 


Thos.  Copeland,  Supt. 
W.  C.  Smith,  Asst.  Supt. 


L.  M.  DYER  &  CO. 


INCORPORATED 


PROVISIONS 

Wholesale  and  Retail 

2,  4,  6  and  8  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephone,  1760  Richmond. 

BOSTON 

F.  W.  Dyer,  Prest.  and  Treas.  G.  A.  Hall,  Vice-Presl. 

J.  E.  Hyland,  Asst.  Treas. 


WHEELER,   ricELVEEN   &   CO. 

(Successors  to  CHAS.  H.  &  EDGAR  SNOW.) 

Combination  Sale  Stable 

243  and  245  Friend  St.,  Boston 

(Near  North  Union  Station.) 
Telephone,  505  Haymarket 

Receivers  and  Solicitors  of  Horses  on  Consignment  for  Auction  and 
f-  rivate  Sale  from  all  Sections  of  the  Country. 

Buyers    will    find    constantly  on  hand    a  large  assortment  of  every  class  of  horses  at 
lowest  prices. 

Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday  at  Comhination  Sale   Stables  at 
10  o'clock  A.  M. 

jj  All  horses  warranted  as  represented  or  money  refunded. 
Accommodations  for  over  300  horses. 

Experienced  salesmen  to  assist  shippers  to  retail   their  horses  with  free    use  of  wagons 
and  harnesses. 

60 


CLASS  28  — HAY  AND  GRAIN 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Six  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  3ds  ;  three  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

.DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

494 

P.  Dunn  &  Co. 

Michael  McDonagh 

I 

495 

((                   a 

James  McCarthy 

2 

495  a 

Manning  Seamans 

Robert  Minnis 

2 

496 

John  J.  White 

Daniel  McCarthy 

I 

497 

"               " 

David  Towhig 

I 

49S 

((               ii 

John  McCarthy 

I 

499 

" 

James  Towhig 

I 

500 

" 

James  Noonan 

2 

501 

W.  P.  Whittemoie 

Martin  Ryan 

I 

502 

" 

Barnard  Fay 

I 

503 

i(              11 

John  Donavan 

2 

504 

a                  ii 

Wm.  Graham 

2 

505 

u                  a 

Horace  Moody 

2 

506 

a                  a 

Tim  Cocharan 

2 

507 

;; 

John  Adams 

2 

508 

a                   ii 

Duncan  Cusick 

3 

5"9 

(;                    (( 

Patrick  Cleary 

3 

510 

t.                                 4t 

Edward  Conroy 

4 

CLASS  29  — LUMBER 

In  this  Class  the  Judges- may  award   such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


511 

Downes  Lumber  Co. 

William  Dunn                                       i 

512 

;(                   a             11 

Charles  Orsie                                        i 

513 

.i 

James  Sullivan                                     i 

514 

Thomas  A.  Elston  &  Co. 

Thomas  J.  Dolan                                 i 

5Ha 

G.  H.  Jennings 

Warren  Belden                                         i 

CLASS  30 -ICE 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


515         Fells  Ice  Co.  (Maiden) 
516 


Guilford  A.  Saunders 
Wm.  Moody 


61 


L.  A.  WATERHOUSE 

ITiuchman 

IJ5  FEDERAL  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


)„  a 


S 


Telephone,  Main  J42i-^ 


55 


Telephone  34S  South  Boston 

PATRICK  DUNN 

COMMISSION  MERCHANT 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealer  in 

Hay,  Straw  and  Grain 

COAL  AND  WOOD 


THE  KING  OF  ALL  WHISKIES 

JOHN  MILLER  &  CO. 

SOLE  PROPRIETORS 

RARK  SQUARE,  BOSTON 


43  DORCHESTER  STREET,  SOUTH  BOSTON 


George  Adams,  Manager. 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 

103  and  105  Bedford  St. 
=^  BOSTON  = 


Telephone, 


Oxford  90 


CLOTH   SPONGERS  AND   REFINISHERS 
London  Shrunk  Process 


62 


IG  FORGE 


CRONON  &  FOSS 

BOSTON 

Telephone  No    I  Tremont 


CLASS  31— COAL    (Singles) 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  mav  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Eight  isls  ;  six  2ds  ;  five  3ds  ;  five  4ths. 


Ko. 

No 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


518 
520 

523 

526 

5  28 
529 
530 
531 
532 
533 
534 
535 
536 
537 
53^ 
539 
540 


Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Boston  Indutrial  Home 
Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

((  (I  a  a 

Paul  G.  Coblenzer 
D.  Fay 
McGreevey  &  Co. 

Martin  Godvin 

J.  A.  Marsh  Coal  Co. 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 


E.  S.  Morse 


Walter  Alonzo  Shedd 
Staples  Coal  Co. 
J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 


James  P.  Quigley 
Albert  C.  Cooley 
James  Gibson 
Michael  T.  Leahy 
Samuel  Dillon 
John  Sullivan 
D.  Fay 

James  F.  Lohan 
Michael  Regan 
Thomas  Hawkins 
James  J.  Godvin 
Edward  Lowman 
Jerry  O'Neil 
Richard  Holland 
John  B.  Collins 
Charles  Stewart 
James  F.  Toomey 
John  J.  Vaughan 
James  McCann 
Walter  A.  Shedd 
Wm.  Gorman 
F.  Sullivan 
Joseph  O'Neil 
Edward  Fog:artv 


63 


S.    G.    PARKER     CO. 

21  Columbia  Street 

Soda  Water,  Saratoga    Spring  Waters 

...AM)  .. 

Dr.  Swett's  Genuine  Root  Beer 

IN     FOUNTAINS 

Telephone,  Brighton  49-2 

Henry    Blewett 

Successor  to  11.   Klitzke. 

French,    Vienna       -^    .    ^r  r  r\.        Pumpernickel 

Cream  BAKER        ^^^^^risp 

and  Graham  Rolls,  Etc. 

250  Winchester  St.,  Brookline 

BREAD  and  ROLLS  at  Retail 
For  Sale  bv 
A.  S.  Spiegel,  141  Eliot   St.,  Boston 

C;irl  A.  Weitz,  105  Eliot  St.,  Boston 

H.  Eiath,  770  Friend  St.,  Boston 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.,  Brookline 


122  W.  FIRST  STREET 

Wholesale  Agent  for 

STANDARD  WOOD  CO.  of  New  York 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 


! 


I 


Bay   State   Fuel 
Company 

A  Consolidation  of  the  Old  Firm  of 
RICHARDSON  &  BACON 

WITH 

BAKER-HUNNEWELL  CO. 

COAL  and   WOOD 

GENERAL  OFFICE  AND  WHARVES 

157    MAIN    STREET 
CAMBRIDGE 


Branch  Office  in  Boston, 

127  Cambridge  Sc. 

Branch  Offices  in  Cambridge 


624  Massachusetts  Avenue 
1336  Massachusetts  Avenue 


Central  Street 
Harvard  Square 


RING'S  Stable 


M.  A.  NEVENS  CO.,  Proprietois 


BOARDING 


LIVERY 
SALE  STABLE 


FIRST  CliSS  TEAMS  TO  LET  BY  DAY  OR  WEEK 

BEST  OF  FEED  AND  CARE  FOfI  BOARDING  HORSES 


138  WORCESTER  STREET 

Formerly  at  72  Northampton  Street 

^"'""feecion         BOSTON,  MASS. 


64 


CLASS   32  — COAL  (Doubles) 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :   Six  ists  ;  four  2ds  ;  four  3ds  ;  four  4ths. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

cf 

Horses 

541 

Batchelder  Bros. 

John  L.  Thomas 

2 

542 

li.                        n 

Dennis  Crowley 

2 

543 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Edward  Phalen 

2 

544 

a             a          i; 

Robert  W.  Ward 

2 

545 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

Edward  Burke 

2 

546 

" 

John  J.  Keefe 

2 

547 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

James  Gibson 

2 

54S 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

Charles  Maches 

2 

549 

E.  S.  Morse 

Kearins  Kenney 

2 

550 

u          (( 

John  Downey 

2 

551 

(i            a 

James  Sweeney 

2 

552 

a            u 

Michello  A.  Granti 

2 

553 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Michael  F.  Lynch 

2 

554 

li                             u 

Charles  Mackie 

2 

555 

u                      u 

Robert  Goosby 

2 

556 

((                      il 

Michael  Griffin 

2 

557 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

Patrick  Touhy 

2 

558 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Michael  Donavan 

2 

CLASS  33  — COAL  (Threes) 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


559 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

John  J.  Horrigan 

3 

560 

E.  S.  Morse 

Cornelius  Crowley 

3 

561 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

John  Wilson 

3 

562 

J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 

Patrick  Crowley 

3 

60 


;el.  348-2,  Dorchester,  W.  D.  \KKDIiH,  Managek. 


Upham's  Corner  Stable  Co, 


rl  ,,=''^^^1  --=?  •"  "<►■ 


-«5-?35l^^:r-sir 


Hack,  Boarding  and 
Livery   Stable 

NO.    767    DUDLEY    STREET 


E.  O.  Bartels.  Wellington  Phillips. 


BARTELS  &  PHILLIPS 

Importing  Tailors 

INo.    32    CornhMI 

BOSTON,    MASS. 

Telephone,  Main  2524. 


Dorchester,   Mass. 

DRESS   SUITS  TO    LET 

For  over  37  years 

Compliments  of 

We  have  been  Makers 
of 

Good  Harness 

and  Collars 

A.  E  BLISS 

GENERAL  SUPERINTENDENT 

MALDEM  ELECTRIC  CO, 
MALDEN  AND  MELROSE 

JAS.  FORGIE^S  SONS, 

\9  and  20  South  Market  St. 

Albany  St.  and  Massachusetts  Ave. 

GAS     LIGHT      CO. 

BOSTON 


66 


CLASS  34— COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 


In  this  Class  the  Judges  niav  award  siicli  ribhons  as  are  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


563  E.  J.  Babcock 

564 

565  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

566 

567  J.  J.  O'Brien 

568  "         - 
569 

570 


John  W.  Watson 
Wm.  J.  Earley 
Michael  Man 
Charles  Fudolen 
Robert  Martell 
Harry  Martell 
Jeremiah  Tobin 
Walter  E.  Higgins 


CLASS  35  — CONTRACTORS 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  maj  award  ribbons  as  follows  :     Nine  ists  ;  six  2ds  ;  five  ^ds  :  five  4ths. 


571 

572 

573 
574 
575 
576 
577 
578 
579 
580 
581 
582 
583 
5S4 
585 


John  T,  Connors 
Sylvanus  S.  Durnin| 
gan  Co. 


W 


Gil 


Wm.  F.  Kedrington 


Martin  O'Brien 

2 

Thomas  O'Brien 

2 

Sylvanus  S.  Durning 

I 

John  McDonald 

I 

Thomas  Harkins 

2 

Wm.  McKenna 

2 

Thomas  Kennedy 

2 

John  May 

2 

Jacob  Nelson 

2 

C.  Schowrm 

2 

Wm.  Crowley 

2 

Thomas  McCarthy 

2 

Charles  Wagner 

2 

Edward  Norris 

2 

John  Goodrow 

2 

67 


E.  S.  HARRIS 

TRUCKMAN 

Forwarder  of  Merchandise  of  all 
Descriptions  and  General  Jobbing 

OFFICE 

197  SOUTH  STREET,  BOSTON 

Telephone  33  Oxford 

JOHN  H.  SULLIVAN 


(ie9<?ral  Qo^traetor 


LAKK  STREEX 

CoK.  Commonwealth  Avenue 

Telephone,  147  Brighton 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


BROOKLINE 


FEW  HORSES  ARE  PRIZE  WINNERS 

CARiGEnEPAlOANoPlIED 

BY  THE  UNDERSIGNED  ARE  PRIZE  WINNERS 


THOS.  J.  O'BRIEN 


Our  Badges,  Medals,  Etc. 


MADE    BY 


BOSTON  BADGE  COMPANY 


629  Old  South  Building 


A.  J.  BERGE,   Representing 


BOSTON 


68 


CONTRACTORS  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

587 

John  Herlihy 

Florence  H.  Barrett 

I 

58S 

Mathew  E.  Nawn 

Michael  Harkins 

I 

5S9 

John  T.  Noone 

John  Bird 

2 

590 

a                    ii 

Wm.  Lewis 

2 

590  a 

John  H.  Sullivan 

Nichols  Thomas 

I 

590  t 

)           "                 " 

James  Dewan 

2 

590  c 

a                    u 

Michael  Cooney 

2 

590  c 

la 

Matthew  Lynch 

2 

590  e 

a                    a 

John  Bowen 

2 

CLASS   36— TRUCKMEN  (Singles) 

In  this  Class  the  Judges  mav  award  ribbons  as  follows  :    Eleven  ists  ;  seven  2ds  ;  six  3ds  ;  six  4ths 


591  Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

592 

593  Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

594 

595  W.  C.  Bray  • 

596  C.  Butler  &  Co. 

597 
598 

599  Hiram  B.  Gould 

600  E.  S.  Harris 
601 

602  "  " 

603  Solomon  B.  Holman 

604  R.  A.  Kennett 

605  A.  W.  Knight 


T.  H.  Decker 
A.  L.  Parker 
Daniel  Hayes 
Patrick  Gill 
Everett  Mclntire 
John  J.  Hallorn 
Jos.  E.  Murray 
George  H.  Berg 
Frederick  H.  Gould 
Daniel  J.  Coughlin 
J.  D.  Buchanan 
M.  J.  Kenney 
John  McQuaide 
Henry  Harvie 
Dennis  Callahan 


69 


Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

PURE  MILK  and  CREAM 

Wales  Place,  Dorchester,  Mass. 

We  sell  a  fine  grade  of  milk,  selected  espe- 
cially for  our  family  trade;  also  milk  for  doc- 
tors, hospitals,  nurseries,  etc. 

Please  send  us  your  order  now.  We  guaran- 
tee to  meet  your  requirements. 

TELEPHONE,  DORCHESTER  450 

J.  O.  WETHERBEE  CO. 

LUMBER  DEALERS 

60    to    74     Bridge    Street 
(Craiaie    Bridge) 

EAST       CAMBRIDGE 


Swastika 


Hill    IBJI Brooches, 


assortment     of 

Hat  Pins,  Scarf 

Pins,  Fobs,  Match    Boxes, 


GEO.   E.   HOMER 

45  Winter  Street  Boston,  Mass. 

Established  1847. 

JAMES  COLLINS  &  COMPANY 

IMPORTERS 

WHOLESALE  LIQUOR  DEALERS 

RECTIPIERS 

133  Beacii  Street  and  164-172  South  Street 

BOSTON,  riASS. 


THE   BOSTON 
WORK-HORSE    PARADE 

Is  a  Benefit  to  the  Horse.     So  Are 

RUBBERS 

Rearing  This 


TRADE 


MARK 


A  Benefit  to  All  Mankind 

BOSTON 

RUBBER 

SHOE    CO. 


BUY 


CHASE'S 

Superfine  Fawn 

Wool  Square 

Blankets 


Best    Blanket    for    Truck    Purposes 

LOOK     for     THE 

THREE  HORSE   HEAD  TRADE-MARK 


When  buying  Hack  Robes   look 
for  the  word  "CHASE" 


70 


TRUCKMEN  (Singles) —Continued 


No.  No. 

of      1      of 

Ribbon  1  Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


606 
607 
608 
609 
610 
611 
61  2 
613 
614 
615 
616 
617 
618 
619 
620 


J.  W.  McEaany 

Mosman  Bros. 
A.  A.  Rowe  &  Soi 
D.  A.  Smith  Co. 
Stone  &  Forsythe 


Henry  VV.  Walter 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

Webber  &  Co. 
Whipple  &  Co. 


Harley  Murphy 
Samuel  C.  Linton 
Elmer  W.  Mosman 
Charles  J.  McCarthy 
Michael  F.  Welch 
Fred  Bryan 
James  Shannon 
Rodner  McLeod 
James  S.  Lee 
Wm.  H.  Cutter 
Frank  H.  Walter 
Robert  A.  Davidson 
Remus  Bert 
Andrew  N,  Damery 
Charles  Roberts 


CLASS  37  — TRUCKMEN  (Doubles  and  Upward) 

DIVISION  A 

In  this  Division  the  Judges  inay  award  ribbons  as  follows  :   Eight  ists  ;  five  2ds  ;  four  3ds  ;  four  4ths 


621 

W.   C.   Bray 

Leonard  L.  Cook 

622 

U                 (( 

Charles  DeCosta 

623 

..     .. 

Fred  A.  Feyler 

624 

u 

William  M.  Parrott 

625 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Albert  Cameron 

626 

H                   U                                it                 u 

John  Coffey 

627 

.. 

Thomas  Murray 

62S 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

John  Holland 

629 

((            a            u 

W.  H.  Morgan 

Compliments  of 

GlHOiM 

29   BEACON    STREET 

^^=  BOSTON  ^^= 


f 


mm^.^mmmmmm^.mmmm 


FEED, 

XTRAVOI  FEED  SIOLASSES 

keeps  the  stock  in  a  healthy  condition. 
It  helps  assimihate  other  foods,  and 
cures  indigestion.  It  produces  a  glossy 
coat.  It  will  eradicate  worms.  Ask 
your  grocer  or  grain  dealer  for  XTRA- 
VIM,  or  .send  for  informa- 
tion and  valuable  book  ^ 


on  the  discovery  and    ^ 
use   of   molasses  as    CC*'*' 


staples  Coal  Co.  Mn|e,  Baler  &  Cn. 


COAL 


AND- 


WOOD 

WHARVES: 

Summer  St.,  BOSTON 

Albany  St.,  BOSTON 

Cor.  Sumner  St.  and 
North  Ferry  Ave.,  EAST  BOSTON 


Mbolesale 
©rocers 

IMPORTERS  AND  JOBBERS 

Teas,  Cote  aofllolasses 


213  and  215  STATE  STREET 

BOSTON 


EDRIC  EI.DKIDCJE 


AUSTIM  L.  BAKER 


72 


TRUCKMEN  (Doubles  and  Upward) 

DIVISION    A— CContinucd) 


Wo. 

of 

Ribbon 


No 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


no 

Of 
Horses' 


630 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

William  F.  McKendry 

2 

631 

R.  J.  Elder 

Bernard  Peterson 

2 

632 

Frost  F.  &  T.  Co. 

Ernest  A.  Rosebury 

2 

633 

E.  S.  Harris 

Albert  Arthur 

2 

634 

U                  it 

Peter  A.  McDonald 

2 

635 

((                u 

Fred  Dourne 

2 

636 

George  E.  Hildreth 

Henry  Tagen 

2 

637 

R.  A.  Kennett 

Elwood  Demerritt 

2 

63S 

" 

Cyrus  Kidston 

2 

639 

it,               a 

Charles  Patchett 

2 

640 

u               a 

Reuben  Keith 

2 

641 

a               ;i 

George  Benham 

3 

TRUCKMEN  (Doubles  and  Upward) 

DIVISION  B 

In  this  Division  the  Judges  may  award  ribbons  as  follows  :  Eight  ists  ;  four  2ds  :  four  3ds  :  four  4ths. 


643 

J.  M.  McEnany 

643 

U                    it 

644 

u 

646 

F.  L.  Noone  &  Co. 

647 

<t                    tt 

648 

a                         a 

649 

R.  C.  Richardson 

650 

I .                   a 

651 

E.  A.  Sears 

653 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

653 

Stone  &  Fors>the  Co 

654 

a                     Li               a 

Henry  Earle 
Joseph  P.  Ahearn 
John  J.  Ahearn 
Frank  Dillingham 
A.  C.  Vance 
James  McWilliams 
Clayton  Seaboyer 
Norman  F.  Fritz 
James  C.  Mullen 
Patrick  J.  Herlihy 
Herbert  Woods 
Patrick  McGovern 


C.  CAPILLO  &  CO, 


SOLE    AGENTS    FOR 


=— "Pliller"^ 
Tie  Best  piiiwauKee  M 


HIGH-LIFE   BEER 


142  COMMERCIAL  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


Wholesale   Bottlers 


R.  J.  ELDER 


Truckman  and  Forwarder 


Summer  and 
Devonshire  Streets 
BOSTON 


298  Border  Street 
EAST  BOSTON 


Telephone  179  Richmond 


I 


R.  C.  RICHARDSON 

General 
Trucking 


114  PURCHASE   STREET 

BOSTON 

Telephone,  Main  1347 


DRAKE'S 


SPEGIALTf^f. 


J 


POUND  CAKE 


AND 


MACAROONS 


ALL  GOOD  GROCERS  SELL  THEM 


mm.  BROTHERS  CO. 

BLUE  HILL  AVE.  &  DOVE  ST.JOXBURY,  MASS. 

Telcplione,  907-3  Roxbury 


74 


TRUCKMEN  (Doubles  and  Upward) 

DIVISION   B-Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

655 

Henry  W.  Walter 

H.  W.  Walter 

2 

656 

Wh 

pple  &  Co. 

James  O'Connell 

2 

657 

Ralph  Fields 

2 

658 

William  Brown 

2 

659 

Moses  Brenen 

2 

660 

Florence  J.  Donahoe 

2 

661 

Walter  W.  Tucker 

2 

662 

Albert  C.  Densmore 

2 

CLASS   38  —  TRUCKMEN  (Fours) 

The  Lawrence  Gold  Medal  is  awarded  for  the  best  four  horse  team  provided  that  the  horses  are 
taken  care  of  hy  the  driver,  and  excluding  anj  previous  winner  of  the  medal.  Under  these  rules  the 
Boston  Elevated  Raihvav  teams  are  excluded  and  also  R.  J.  Elders  team,  which  won  the  medal  in  1906, 
so  that  the  competion  for  the  medal  this  year  is  between  Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co.,  R.  A.  Kennett, 
J.  M.  McEnany  and  Whipple  &  Co. 

The  Judges  in  this  Class  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved. 


663 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

William  M.  Erskin 

4 

664 

a               a               u 

Michel  Deveraux 

4 

665 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Peter  F.  Dolan 

4 

666 

U                          U                             C(                  u 

David  Regan 

4 

667 

R.  J.  Elder 

Fred  Levoie 

4 

66S 

R.  A.  Kennett 

Levi  Clark 

4 

668  a 

J.  M.  McEnany 

Philip  Henry  Boyd 

4 

669 

Whipple  &  Co. 

Abe  Nothern 

4 

W.  p.  Whittemore 

Hay  and  Grain 


f 


Telephone,  1237-4  Richmona 

W.  B.  HOWARD'S 

Back  Bay,  South  and  West  End 

EXPRESS 

lompiiineiiis  oi 

Fe  s  ce  Company 

Stand,  14  Dock  Square,  Boston 

ALBERT  A.  SMITH 

Groceries  and  Provsons 

SEA  FOOD 

362  and  363  Cambridge  St. 
ALLSTON 

Telephones,  Brighton   46 — 355-301-41  2. 

Metropolitan  Laundry 

Watertown,    Mass. 
H.    H.   SAWYER,     Proprietor 

Finest  Equipped  Laundry 
in  Existence. 

Work  Called  for  and  Delivered 

76 


RULES  OF  THE  ROAD 

From  "RIDER  AND  DRIVER"  New  York,  as  compiled  by  Mr.  William  Phelps  Eno. 

SIGNALS 

1.  In  slowing  up  or  stopping,  a  signal  should  ahvavs  be  given  to  those  behind  by  raising  the 
whip  or  hand  vertically. 

2.  In  turning  while  in  motion,  or  in  starting  to  turn  from  a  standstill,  a  signal  should  be 
given  by  raising  the  whip  or  hand,  indicating  with  it  the  direction  in  which  the  tiu-n  is  to  be  made. 

RIGHT   OF   WAY 

1.  On  all  the  public  streets  or  highways  all  vehicles  going  in  a  northerly  or  southerly  direction 
should  have  the  right  of  way  over  all  vehicles  going  in  a  easterly  or  westerly  direction. 

2.  The  officers  and  men  of  the  Fire  Department  and  Fire  Patrol,  with  their  fire  apparatus  of 
all  kinds,  when  going  to,  on  duty  at,  or  returning  from  a  fire,  and  all  ambulances,  the  ofliicers  and 
men  and  vehicles  of  the  Police  Department,  United  States  mail  wagons,  and  all  physicians  who 
have  a  police  permit,  have  the  right  of  way  at  all  times,  in  any  street,  and  through  any  procession. 

SPEED 
No  vehicle  should  proceed  at  any  time  at  a  greater  speed  than  the  law  allows,  and  is  safe  and 
proper  under  the  conditions  then  obtaining. 

DEFINITIONS 

1.  All  avenues  and  streets  with  a  parkway  in  the  middle  should  be  considered  as  having  but 
one  roadway. 

2.  The  word  "vehicle"  includes  equestrians  and  everything  on  wheels  or  runners,  except 
street  cars  and  baby  carriages. 

Importance  of  Keeping  to  the  Right,  Passing,  Turning,  Crossing  and  Stopping 

1.  Slowly  moving  vehicles  should  keep  to  the  right  and  as  near  the  right-hand  curb  as 
possible,  so  as  to  leave  room  in  the  middle  of  the  street  for  vehicles  going  at  a  greater  speed. 

2.  A  vehicle  meeting  another  should  pass  on  the  right. 

3.  A  vehicle  overtaking  another  should  pass  on  the  left  side  of  the  overtaken  vehicle  and  not 
pull  o\ei  to  the  right  until  entirely  clear  of  it. 

4.  A  vehicle  turning  into  another  street  to  the  right  should  turn  the  corner  as  near  the  right- 
hand  curb  as  practicable. 


Thus; 


k. 


le  left,  the 
I  I  'Not  this  way  I  I 


5.     In  turning  into  another  street  to  the  left,  the   vehicle   should  turn  around  the  center  of 
intersection  of  the  two  streets. 
Thus: 


<-. 


">   \(  i\  r 


6.     A  vehicle  crossing  from  one  side  of  the  street  to  the  other  side  should  do  so, 
thus:  not  this  way:  nor  this  way. 


7.  No  vehicle  should  stop  with  its  left  side  to  the  curb,  except  on  established  cab.  hack  and 
truck  stands. 

S.  Unless  in  an  emergency  or  to  allow  another  vehicle  or  pedestrian  to  cross  its  path,  no 
vehicle  should  stop  in  any  public  street  or  highway,  except  near  the  right-hand  curb  thereof,  so  as 
not  to  obstruct  a  crossing. 

77 


Complimeats  of 

Columbia  Road 
Stable 


McGREEVEY  &  CO, 

DEALERS  IN 

Coal  and  Wood 

77  SMITH  STREET 
ROXBURY 

Telephone  Connection 


JOHN     R.    BOWKER 

ELECTRICAL 
CONTRACTOR 

7   Doane  St.        Tel.,   Main   98 

Best  Work  at  Reasonable  Prices. 

Repairs  Promptly  Attended  to. 

TELEPHONE,  112  SO.  BOSTON 

BOSTON  FLAG  POLE  CO. 

DEALERS    IN 

SPRUCE  and  CEDAR   POLES 

Spars,  Tent,  Flag,  Pike  and  Bean  Poles, 
and  Poles  for  Rustic  Fences. 

Lignumvit;L'  Trucks,  Gilt  Balls  and  Halyards. 

169    BROADWAY    EXTENSION 
Near  Dorchester  Ave.  SOUTH    BOSTON 


A.T.  Bliss  &  Co. 
PRINTERS 

60   Pearl  Street 

BOSTON 

Manning  Seamans 

DEALER      IN 

Staple  and  Fancy  Groceries 

FLOUR,  OATS,  CORNMEAL 
HAY,  STRAW,  and   DRAIN   PIPE 


Geo.G.  Fox  Co 


BAKERS 


OHARLESTOWN 


MASS. 


HARVARD  SQUARE  :  :  :  :  :  BROOKLINE. 


78 


CO  IVl  PLl  M  ENTS     OF 


A     FRIEND 


AMERICAN  TRUST  COMPAINY 


53     State     Street,    Bostoi 

Capital  and  Surplus  Earnings       -       -       - 


$2,750,000 


DIRECTORS 


N.  W.  JORDAN 


Chairman 


C.  F.   Adams,  2d. 

Rodolphe  L.   Agassiz 

F.   Lothrop  Ames 

Hobart  Ames 

Edwin  F.  Atkins 
Frederick  Ayer 
Charles   S.   Bird 
A.  G.   Bullock 
Samuel  Carr 
Gilmer  Clapp 

Russell  G.  Fessenden 
Gordon  Dexter 

William  R.  Driver 
F.  C.  Dumaine 


Eugene  N.  Foss 

William  A.  Gaston 
Elmer   P.   Howe 
John  Lawrence 

John  S.   Lawrence 
Lester  Leland 
S.   E.  Peabody 

Francis  Peabody,  Jr. 
Royal   Robbins 
Henry  A.   Rueter 

Philip  L.   Saltonstall 
R.   Paul  Snelling 
Frank  W.    Stearns 
Eugene  V.  R.  Thayer 
Charles   W.  Whittier 


OFFICERS 

RUSSELL  Q.  FESSENDEN,  President  CHARLES  H.  BOWEN,  Secretary 

CHARLES  L.  BURRILL,  VicePres.  and  Treas.     EDWARD  A.  COFFIN,  Asst.  Treas. 
JAMES  H.  PERKINS,  Vice-Pres.  Q.  W.  AURYANSEN,  Asst.  Sec'y. 

79 


The  MONARCH  TYPEWRITER    COMPANY 

(OLD    SOUTH    building) 

12  Milk   St.,  Boston,  Mass. 


Next  time  buy 


Oxford 
Chocolates 


The  "all  right"  kind 


Hazen  Confectionery  Company 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


H.  P.  HOOD  &  SONS 
MILK 

AND 

CREAM 


Pure    =     Clean 


Safe 


454  Rutherford  Ave.,  Charlestown 
193  Alley  St.,  Lynn 

105  Homes  Ave.,  Dorchester 
252  Bridge  St.,  Salem 


Excelsior 
Laundry    Company 

Successor  to 

F.    P.    COX   LAUNDRY   CO. 

Caundrv 
Contractors 

Special  Attention  to 
FINE    CUSTOM     AND     FAMILY     WORK 

520   Harrison  Ave 

Ccr.  Randolph  St.  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,  985  TREMONT 


80 


/ 


Cr-" 


BOSTON 
ORK  HORSE  PARADE 
ASSOCIATION 


B 


n 


1908 


CATALOGUE 


Boston   Work-Horse 
Parade  Association 


(incorporated) 


SIXTH   ANNUAL  PARADE 


MAY  30th,  1908 


A.  T.  BLI6S  &  CO.,  PRINTERS   60  PEARL  ST.  BOSTON 


InarJi  of  itrrrturfi 


HENRY   C.    MERWIN,    President, 

state  House,  Room  50. 

RANDOLPH    K.    CLARKE,    Vice-President, 

72  Lincoln  Street. 

ARTHUR  PERRIN,  Vice-President, 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline. 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISIEAD,   Secretary, 

lOi   Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA    ATWOOD,   3d,  Treasurer, 

City  Hall. 


GEORGE  VV.   HARRINGTON,  59  Chestnut  Street. 
JOHN  H.  JEWETT,  Boston  Herald. 

FRANCIS    PEABODY,  Jr.,  Devonshire  Building. 

AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.  R.  C.  V.  S.,  State  House,  Room  13S 
W.   D.   Q.UIMBY,   79  Portland  Street. 

BENJ.   W.   WELLS,  50  Congress  Street. 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


HE  first  Work-Horse  Parade  in  Boston  and  the  first  in  this 
country,  was  held  on  Memorial  Day,  1902,  under  the 
management  of  ten  or  twelve  men  who  had  been  drawn 
together  by  their  interest  in  horses.  Soon  afterward  they 
were  incorporated  under  the  name  of  "  The  Boston  Work- 
Horse  Parade  Association,"  and  it  is  hoped  that  humane  persons  who 
have  wills  to  make  and  property  to  leave  will  bear  that  title  in  mind. 
The  Association  has  received  a  very  inadequate  support  from  the  rich 
horse-owners  and  horse-users  in  the  community;  it  always  finishes  the 
year  with  a  deficit,  and  were  it  not  for  the  great  generosity  of  a  few  men 
and  women  it  is  doubtful  if  the  Annual  Parade  could  be  maintained. 

Of  the  money  contributed  to  the  Association  this  year,  about  one- 
half  comes  from  a  very  few  persons,  and  especially  from  the  widow  of 
the  first  President  of  the  Association,  the  originator  of  the  Parade.  He 
occupied  a  peculiar  place  in  the  community,  having  warm  friends  among 
men  of  every  class  and  condition,  and  his  loss  is  keenly  felt  by  the 
Directors.  The  Lawrence  gold  medal,  the  most  valuable  prize  given  by 
the  Association,  is  annually  awarded  in  honor  of  him,  and  will,  it  is 
hoped,  preserve  his  memory  for  many  years  to  come. 

The  Association  also  acknowledges  with  gratitude  the  gift  of  two 
hundred  dollars  from  the  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of 
Cruelty  to  Animals,  a  compliment  which  is  fully  appreciated.  This  gift 
is  in  addition  to  the  gold  medal  annually  given  by  the  society. 

There  is  but  one  change  this  year  in  the  list  of  Directors.  Mr. 
Charles  L.  Burrill  resigned  on  account  of  his  removal  from  the  city,  and 
Mr.  George  W.  Harrington,  who  has  served  the  Association  for  several 
years  as  a  Judge  in  the  Old  Horse  class,  was  elected  in  his  place. 

THE  USES  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 

Beside  holding  the  Annual  Parade,  the  Association  has  maintained 
during  the  past  winter  the  following  means  for  improving  the  condition 
and  treatment  of  work-horses:  a  Permanent  Agent;  a  Course  of  Free 
Lectures;  a  Stable  Competition.     These  will  be  considered  separately. 

3 


THE  PERMANENT  AGENT. 

It  has  sometimes  been  said  that  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade 
Association  does  nothing  directly  to  improve  the  condition  and  treatment 
of  the  poorest  class  of  work-horses  —  the  horses  who  have  no  friends,  in 
their  owners  or  otherwise.  Feeling  that  there  was  some  truth  in  this 
statement,  the  Directors  employed  last  December  Mr.  Maurice  B. 
Conway,  as  a  permanent  agent  to  inspect  the  poorer  class  of  stables  and 
horses,  and  to  assist  the  owners  with  advice  and  information  and,  in 
deserving  cases,  with  blankets,  harness,  medicine  and  expert  shoeing. 
Veterinary  surgeons  and  blacksmiths  have  generously  offered  to  give 
their  services  free,  at  the  request  of  the  agent;  and  much  good  has  been, 
done  in  this  manner. 

It  often  happens  that  skilful  shoeing,  or  the  gift  of  a  proper  collar 
or  saddle  or  of  a  warm  blanket  will  save  an  old  or  worn-out  horse  from 
much  unnecessary  suffering.  It  often  happens  also  that  a  man  will  make 
some  improvement  in  his  stable  or  in  the  treatment  of  his  horses,  such  as 
stopping  holes  in  the  walls,  repairing  doors  and  windows,  providing  bed- 
ding, watering  his  horses  more  frequently,  grooming  them  better,  etc.,  if 
the  matter  is  properly  suggested  to  him  by  a  person  acting  as  agent  for  a 
well-known  society. 

The  day  after  the  fire  in  Chelsea  our  agent  was  sent  there  to  assist  in 
providing  food  fo*r  the  horses  of  poor  men  who  were  burnt  out,  and  also 
to  help  them  replace  harness  and  wagons.  He  remained  in  Chelsea  about 
two  weeks  engaged  in  this  work,  and  his  services  have  since  been  placed 
at  the  disposal  of  the  Chelsea  Rehabilitation  Committee  to  assist  them  in 
buying  horses,  harness  and  wagons. 

The  names  of  those  who  contributed  money  for  the  relief  of  Chelsea 
sufferers  through  our  agent,  will  be  found  below  in  the  general  list  of 
contributors.  Those  who  have  contributed  services  or  supplies  for  the 
relief  of   poor  horse-owners  in   Chelsea,  or  elsewhere,  are  the  following:. 

Mr.  Daniel  Buckley,  shoeing. 

Messrs.  Coldwell  Bros.,  use  of  their  office. 

L.  E.  Chandler  &  Co..  one  harness. 

VV.  J.  Flanders,  shoeing. 

B.  F.  Griggs  &  Co.  (through  Mr.  E.  D.  Moakley),  oats  and 

hay  to  the  value  of  $ioo. 
S.  S.  Fierce  Co.,  harness  and  blankets. 
Messrs.  Priest  &  Smith,  the  free  use  of  one  stall. for  a  year. 
VV.  D.  Qiiimby,  a  wagon,  and  the  loan  of  two  other  wagons. 


FREE  LECTURES. 
'A  conference  on  Shoeing,  intended  for  experts  and  well  attended  by 
them,  was  held  by  the  Association  in  February,  and   afterward,  on    suc- 
cessive Friday  Evenings,  a  course  of    Free  Lectures  was    delivered  as 
follows: 

Mr.  a.   B.   Root — "  The  Shoeing  of  Horses." 
Dr.  Frank  L.  Sullivan — "  Common  Equine  Diseases." 
/  Mr.  W.  D.  Quimby — "  Harness." 

}  Dr.   W.   L.  LaBaw — "  The  Age  of  Horses  and  the  Care  of 
(  Their  Teeth." 

Mr.   M.  B.  Conway — "  Feeding  and  Watering." 
Dr.   D.  L.  Bolger — "  Diseases  of  the  Feet." 
Mr.  C.   a.   Campbell — "  Driving." 
Hon.  George  G.  Crocker — "  Rules  of  the  Road." 
Mr.  Thomas  Langlan — "  Experiences  as  a  Humane  Agent." 

The  lectures  were  attended  by  extremely  attentive  audiences,  and 
the  Association  hereby  expresses  its  thanks  to  the  lecturers,  and  its  hope 
that  their  addresses  will  be  repeated  next  winter. 

THE  STABLE  COMPETITION. 

Entries  were  accepted  this  year  from  stables  of  every  kind,  and  they 
were  judged,  not  in  competition,  but  accordingly  as  they  satisfied  the 
standard  fixed  by  the  Judges.  Among  the  points  considered  were: 
quality  of  hay  and  grain,  bedding,  blanketing,  grooming,  ventilation, 
stalls,  sanitary  condition  of  stable,  and  last,  but  not  least,  the  handling  of 
the  horses  by  drivers  and  grooms,  including  the  condition  in  which  the 
horses  are  returned  to  the  stable  by  the  drivers.  There  were  forty  entries. 
and  the  names  of  the  stables  and  stable  foremen  winning  prizes  are  stated 
below.  The  stables  and  the  foremen  are  not  always  graded  alike.  Some- 
times, a  foreman  makes  poor  use  of  the  facilities  at  his  command,  and  in 
other  cases  a  good  foreman  has  to  struggle  against  bad  drivers,  poor 
facilities,  or  a  stingy  owner. 

The  stable  competitions  of  this  and  the  previous  year  have  disclosed 
the  fact  that  man}'  owners  absolutely  waste  capital  which  they  have 
invested  in  horses  by  neglecting  to  take  proper  care  of  them,  to  say 
nothing  of  humanity.  The  following  matters  especially  have  been  forced 
upon  the  attention  of  the  Judges : 

I.  That  if  the  men  are  on  good  terms  with  the  employer,  the  horses 
are  usually  well  treated ;  whereas,  if  the  men  are  dissatisfied,  the  horses  are 
always  badly  treated. 

5 


2.  That  the  worst  enemy  o£  the  horse  is  intoxicating  liquor  in  the 
driver  or  stablemen. 

3.  That  in  many  stables,  especially  trucking  stables,  there  is  an  insuili- 
cient  force  on  Sundays,  so  that  the  horses  are  not  properly  cleaned,  bedded 
or  watered. 

4.  That  in  many  stables,  otherwise  excellent,  the  horses  are  not 
watered  at  night  after  eating  their  hay,  when  they  are  always  thirsty. 

5.  That  in  the  case  of  many  large  concerns  the  stable  treatment  is 
almost  perfect,  but  the  drivers  hurry  the  horses  when  they  start  out  in  the 
morning,  or  after  the  noon  feed,  and  also  hurry  them  to  the  stable  at  night, 
bringing  them  in  hot.  This  is  especially  true  of  the  lighter  horses,  such  as 
those  used  by  bakers,  milk  dealers  and  department  stores. 


The  Judges  for  the  Stable  Competition,  to  whom  the  Association  is 
indebted  for  very  .careful  and  conscientious  work,  were  the  following: 


DR.  HOWARD  BUCK, 
MR.  M.  B.  CONWAY, 
MR.  G.   W.  HARRINGTON, 
DR.  J.  H.  ROLLIN, 
MR.  JAMES  WEBSTER. 


STABLE    COMPETITION. 


FIRST   PRIZE. 


Stable. 

Atlantic  Works 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Austin  Biscuit  Co. 

Batchelder  Bros. 

Boston  American 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Bray,  William  C. 

Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co. 

Coughlan,  M.  J. 

Elder,  R.  J. 

Hupprich,  Ludvvig 


Foremen, 

William  Dunbar 
John  Redman 
William  Parker 
Thomas  P.  Harding 
George  W.  Pritchard 
Charles  J.  Dillon 
Everett  P.  Mclntyre 
F.  E.  Beedy 

William  W.  Dickson 
Ludwig  Hupprich,  Jr. 


STABLE  COMPETVnON.  — Co;// imied. 


FIRST  PRIZE. 


Hood,  H.  P.,  &  Sons  (Charlcstown) 
"  "  "        (Dorchester) 

"  "        (Forest  Hills) 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 
Marsh,  J.  A.,  Coal  Co. 
McEnany,  J.  W. 
Melrose  Club  Stable  (E    J.  Gale) 
Metropolitan  Laundry 
Priest  &  Smith 
M.  R.  Segall 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 
Whitine,  D.,  &  Sons 


Foremen. 

Bennett  Campbell 

J.  Goldrick 

I.  Fish 

M.  J.  Commins 

P.  Boyd 


James  Webster 

Godfrey  Hardick 

Charles  A.  Sutton 

Peter  J.  Freely,  Foreman  J.  G. 

&  B.  S.  Ferguson  (Roxbury 

Stable) 
Wm.  Alexander,  Foreman 

Whipple  &  Co.   (Somerville 

Stable) 


SECOND    PRIZE. 
Badger,  E.  B.,  &  Co. 
Consumers'  Coal  Co. 
Dennett  &  Johnson 
Dowd  Bros. 

Ferguson,  J.G.&B.  S. (Roxbury  Stable) 
Lavigny,  J.  S. 

Maiden  Electric  Co.  John  W.  Silliker 

Nichols,  C.  H.,  &  Bros.  William  Douglass 

Reed,  G.  W.  Willi:im  E.  Salmon 

Rowe,  A.  A.,  &  Son  J.  G.  Hodsdon 

Stetson  Coal  Co.  James  Hurst 

Sumner,  Herbert  R. 
W\ir,  James 

Whipple  &  Co.   (Somerville  Stable)  Foreman  won  First  Prize. 

See  preceding  list 


THIRD    PRIZE. 


Abrams,  Myer 
McLoughlin,  M.  J, 


FIRE  DEPARTMENT  STABLES. 

Tliere  was  a  special  class  for  Fire  Department  Stables,  in  which 
three  cities  were  entered.  In  this  class  the  entries  were  judged  in  com- 
petition, one  cit}'  against  another,  and  the  prizes  were  awarded  as 
follows: 

First  Prize — City  of  Somerville. 
Second  Prize — City  of  Cambridge. 
Third  Prize — City  of  Melrose. 

A  gold  medal  is  awarded  to  Mr.  James  Hopkins,  Chief  of  the 
Somerville  Department,  for  the  great  excellence  of  the  stables  under  his 
charge.  Mr.  Hopkins  has  been  a  member  of  the  Somerville  Fire 
Department  for  more  than  lift}'  years. 

The  Judges  in  the  Fire  Department  Stable  Competition  were: 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d, 
LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD. 

FIRE  EXITS  FOR  STABLES. 

The  following  extract  from  the  report  for  1907  of  Benjamin  W- 
Wells,  late  Fire  Commissioner,  and  a  valued  Director  of  this  Association, 
speaks  for  itself: 

STABLES. 

"  Scores  of  horses  are  burned  or  suffocated  to  death  every  year  in  this 
city.  Some  reasonable  regulation  of  stable  construction  should  be  passed 
looking  to  the  proper  arrangement  of  runways  and  exits.  This  great  and 
cruel  loss  of  horse  life  has  been  to  a  very  considerable  degree  unnecessary, 
and  if  some  official  supervision  of  stables  with  autliority  to  require  proper 
construction  could  prevail,  the  horror  could  be  greatly  abated. 

"  The  Work-Horse  Parade  Association,  which  has  accomplished  so 
much  for  the  welfare  of  the  horse  in  this  city,  might  well  take  this  subject 
under  consideration." 

THE  DISPOSAL  OF  OLD  HORSES. 

There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  commimit}'  that  old  and  worn-out 
horses,  or  painfully  lame  horses,  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be 
killed,  or  otherwise  disposed  of  in  a  humane  manner.  It  seems  almost 
impossible  that  a  firm  or  corporation  should  use  a  horse  for  ten,  fifteen  or 
even  twenty  years,  and  then,  when  he  is  old  and  worn  out,  sell  him  for  a 
small  price  to  any  chance  buyer.      And  yet  this  is  frequentl}'  done. 


The  following  is  a  law  recentl}'  passed  by  the  Massachusetts 
Legislature: 

[Chap.  133.] 

An  Act  Relative  to  the  Disposition  of  Certain  Horses 
Owned  by  Cities  and  Towns. 

Be  it  enacted^  etc.^  as  foUoxvs : 

Section  i.  Whenever  any  horses  used  in  the  fire  department,  the 
police  department,  the  street  or  sanitary  department,  or  any  other  depart- 
ment of  any  city  or  town  shall,  by  reason  of  disability  or  disease,  become 
unfit  for  use  therein,  the  commissioner  or  other  officer  having  charge  of 
such  department,  in  cities  with  the  approval  of  the  mayor,  and  in  towns 
with  the  approval  of  the  selectmen,  instead  of  causing  such  horses  to  be 
so'd,  may  transfer  them  to  the  custody  of  the  charitable  society  incorporated 
under  the  name  of  Red  Acre  Farm,  Incorporated,  or  to  any  other  charitable 
society  incorporated  in  this  commonwealth  for  the  prevention  of  cruelty  to 
animals,  or  for  the  care  and  protection  of  dumb  animals,  if  the  society  is 
willing  to  accept  the  custody  thereof,  to  be  disposed  of  in  such  manner  as 
the  said  society  may  deem  best;  provided^  that  the  society  upon  receiving 
any  such  horse  shall  give  a  written  agreement  not  to  sell  the  horse  or  to  let 
the  same  for  hire.  If  any  horse  so  received  shall  thereafter  be  sold  or  let 
for  hire,  the  proceeds  of  such  sale  or  letting  shall  be  the  property  of  the 
city  or  town,  and  custody  of  the  horse  shall  revert  to  the  city  or  town. 

Section  2.  This  act  shall  take  effect  upon  its  passage.  [_Af>proved 
Februaiy  27,  igo8.'] 

Red  Acre  Farm  is  always  ready  to  accept  the  charge  of  an}'  horse 
transferred  to  it  b}^  any  person,  firm  or  corporation;  and  the  agent  of  this 
Association,  Mr.  M.  B.  Conway,  acts  also  as  agent  for  the  Farm. 


in 


m 


^  < 


10 


SIXTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,   1908 


NY  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  or  out  of 
condition  will  be  disqualitied. 

Every  entry  not  disqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon,  either 
first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow).  In  the  Old 
Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons  are  awarded,  which 
are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other  classes. 

Each  blue  ribbon  winner  will   receive  a  brass  medal  to 
be  worn  as  a  permanent  ornament  on  the  horses. 

There  is  no  restriction  this  year  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons 
to  be  awarded.  The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(i)     Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green 
horses,  and,  if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any  horse, 
unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type 
and  good  quality. 

MANNERS. 
Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the  horse 
has  been  treated  kindly. 

COLOR. 
The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 

THE  VEHICLE. 
The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry,   or  reduce 
the  grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 

THE  HARNESS. 
The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count ;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especially  in  the 
collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by 
reason  of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect 
in  the  harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  and  inside  reins  too  long,  in  the 
case  of  pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 

11 


Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of 
it,  is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially 
in  respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  re- 
quired. Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  orna- 
ments should  not  be  used. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association  and  shown  in  a 
photograph  printed  in  this  catalogue  weighs  only  53  pounds,  collar  and 
all,  and  it  is  big  enough  for  the  average  1350-pound  horse.  Horses  of 
that  weight  frequently  carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The 
bridle  shown  in  the  photograph  weighs  less  than  two  pounds  —  about  half 
the  usual  weight. 

CERTimCATES. 

In  addition  to  the  ribbons,  certificates  will  be  given  to  those  drivers 
whose  horses  appear  serviceably  sound  and  in  good  condition  and  spirits, 
provided  that  they  have  besn  driven  continuously  by  the  same  driver  for 
at  least  a  year  before  the  date  of  entry;  and  provided,  also,  that  a  certifi- 
cate to  this  effect,  signed  by  the  owner,  was  filed  with  the  entry  blank. 

The  provision  as  to  the  length  of  time  during  which  the  horses  have 
been  driven  must  be  true  of  each  horse  in  the  team,  if  there  are  more  than 
one,  except  that  in  the  case  of  a  four-horse  team  it  will  be  suflScient  if 
three  of  the  horses  have  been  driven  by  the  driver  for  one  year. 

A  horse  shall  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  he  goes  sound  and 
breathes  sound 

These  certificates  have  nothing  to  do  with  the  ribbons.  A  horse  may 
be  eligible  for  a  ribbon,  although  the  driver  is  not  eligible  for  a  certificate. 

Certificates  are  not  awarded  where  owner  and  driver  are  one  and  the 
same  person. 

SPECIAL  PRIZES. 

Beside  the  Lawrence  Gold  Medal  offered  by  the  Association  for  the 
best  four-horse  team,  driven  and  cared  for  by  the  same  man,  there  are 
special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums  of  money 
offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse,  and  other  classes  by  the  follow- 
ing: Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  Animals, 
through  G.  T.  Angell,  Esq.,  American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal 
Rescue  League,  Red  Acre  Farm  (the  home  for  horses).  Miss  Julia  H. 
Worthington,  Mrs.  Thacher  Loring,  Mrs.  Amanda  Dwight,  Mr.  George 
W.  Harrington,  Messrs.  James  Forgie's  Sons,  The  Mark  Cross  Com- 
pany, The  London  Harness  Company,  and  others.     These  will  be  lound 

specified  in  the  entry  list  below. 

12 


DRIVING  COMPETITION. 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four  and  six-in-hand  teams  in  the  "  Truck- 
men "  Chiss  will  be  held  in  or  near  Commonwealth  Avenue,  while  the 
judging  is  taking  place.  Entries  for  this  competition  need  not  be  made 
beforehand.     The  first  prize  will  be  a  silver  medal. 

U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS. 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  and  Letter  Distributors  who 
use  horses  in  the  Boston  District,  of  whom  there  are  about  thirty-five. 

These  men  receive  as  a  horse  allowance  only  $300  a  year,  and  as  this 
sum  was  fixed  when  the  price  of  horses,  hay  and  grain  was  much  less 
than  it  is  now,  the  sum  is  wholly  insufficient. 

The  men  hope  to  receive  an  increase  for  this  allowance  of  $100  a 
year,  and  the  Association  will  endeavor  to  assist  them  in  the  matter. 

NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS. 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing  stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing  stand 
at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclosed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  always  apparent,  frequently  ex- 
clude a  fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 
and  green  horses  are  discriminated  against. 

THE  JUDGES. 

If  the  principles  upon  which  the  prizes  are  awarded  be  kept  in  mind, 
the  Association  believes  that  there  will  be  very  little  dissatisfaction  with 
the  decisions  of  the  Judges.  Increasing  care  has  been  taken  each  year  in 
the  selection  of  them,  and  the  Association  is  confident  that  its  Judges  now 
form  a  band  of  men  as  competent  and  impartial  as  could  be  secured. 
Their  arduous  and  difficult  services  are  rendered  without  compensation, 
although  many  of  them  come  from  di-tant  points,  and  the  Association 
hereby  expresses  its  gratitude  for  their  generous  assistance. 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE. 


Horses  walked  on  starling  out  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and  at 
night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or  if 
the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponj^ed  under  collar  and  saddle. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only,  horses 
wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge  on  coming 
in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing  the  horse, 
much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not  much, 
on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.  (In  any  case 
watered  at  night.  After  eating  their  hay. 
This  is  especially  necessary  in  summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday 
noon  ;   cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter. 

Horses  salted  in  the  bran  mash,  or  other- 
wise, with  regularity. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie  with 
heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or  grated 
in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
<lrinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for 
the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all  —  Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morning, 
and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing  hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  cleaning, 
or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no  mat- 
ter how  hot;   or  not  w^atered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating  their 
hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night,  and 
horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  —  too  much  trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody  hap- 
pens to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean  :  sweat  allowed  to  accu- 
mulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  l^eing 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up  dirty. 

Stable  close — no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the  horses' 
heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  evening 
and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken  ;  doors  left  open ;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge  : 
no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all  —  Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about ;  general  atmosphere  of  noise 
and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out  or 
put  up,  nor  on -Sundays. 


14 


Concert  Iprooram 

FROM    S    TO     lO    o'clock 

RE:VIE:\A/INC3i      SXAND 

Junction  of  Commonwealth  Avenue  and  Beacon  Street 


12. 

13- 
14. 

'5- 

16. 
18. 


MARCH,   "Mars  Triumphal"      . 
SELECTION,   "Spring  Chicken" 
WALTZ,   "AuRevoir"       . 
INTERMEZZO,  "Teliama" 
MARCH,  "Under  Arms"    . 
SELECTION,   "Belle  of  New  York" 
INTERMEZZO,   "Hearts  and  Flowers 
WALTZ,  "Merry  Widow" 
MARCH,  "Imperial" 
SELECTION,  "Mile.  Modiste" 
FREAKS  OF  BLACKVILLE 
INTERMEZZO,  "Persia" 
MARCH,  "Battleship  Connecc" 
"TONE  PICTURES  of  the  NORTH 
WALTZ,  "Espana"  . 
SELECTION,  "Red  Mill" 
MARCH,  "2nd  Conn."       . 
"STAR  SPANGLED  BANNER" 


Pinard 
Ca  rle 
Waldteufel 
Haines 
Hayes 
Kerker 
Tobani 
Lehar 
Bag  ley 
Herbert 
Dalbey 
Albert 
Fulton 
D  SOUTH"  Bendix 
.      Waldteufel 
Herbert 
Reeves 


FIRST  CORPS  CADETS  BAND 

JOHN   B.   FIELDING,  Bandmaster 
15 


CHIEIF      MARSHAL- 
FRANCIS    PEABODY,   Jr. 


Randolph  K.  Clarke 
Arthur  Perrin 
Joshua  Atwood,  3D 
Austin  Peters,  M.R.  C.V.S. 
John  H.  Jewett 
Louis  F.  Gavet 


-    -    AIDS    -    - 

Hakkv  W.   Soule 
William  D.  Qulmby 
Charles  L.   Burrill 
Lyman  O.   Shurtleff 
Arthur  Blake 


John  F.   Waters 
Arthur  Gilbert  Merwin 
Mark  V.  O'Neill 
Walter  Ross  McDaniel 
Thomas  A.  Mil  ler 
John  Kilduff 


VEl-TEIR  I  NARV      INSPEIC-TOR 

Dr.  frank   J.   SULLIVAN 


Robert  Taylor 


USHEIRS 

J.  F.  Whitney 


A-  L.   Berry 


JUDGEIS 


ALLIN,  H.   N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  J.  M. 


BAKER,  GEORGE  M. 
BAKER,  JAMES  E. 
BARNES,  DR.  W.  E. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BOS  WORTH,  CHARLES  W. 
BRAV,  W.  C. 
BRIG  HAM,   W.  E. 
BUNKER,  DR.  MADISON 

CAMPBELL,  B  J. 
CARTER.  R.  D. 
CONWAY,  M.  B. 

DELANO,  CHARLES  W. 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.   W. 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 
DUMxMER,  R.  G. 

ELDREDGE,  F.  S. 

FARRAR,  J.  F 
FELLOWS,  ALBERT 
FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 
FOGG,  G.  M. 

GALLUP,  H.  P. 
GORDON,  JOHN 

HARDING,  R.  W. 
HARRINGTON,  GEORGE  W. 
HAVE.N,  HIRAM  A. 
HOFFMAN,  E.  H. 

JOHNSON,  A.  R. 

KENNETT,  R.  A. 
KENNEY,  J.  R. 
KEOUGH,  DR.  D.  P 


LANGLAN,  THOMAS 
LIB  BY,   WYMAN 
LORD,  WILLIAM  H. 

MACK,  THOMAS  W. 
MANLEY,  LOWELL 
MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MERRILL,   S.  D. 
MERWIN,  A    G 


PARKER,  AUGUSTIN  H. 
PEPPER,  CHARLES  H. 
PETERS,   H.  M. 
PETTIGREW,  y.  A. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 

RING,  THOMAS  H. 
ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,  J.  E. 
ROBINSON,  N.  T. 
ROLLIN,  J.  H. 


SAWYER,  CHARLES  W. 
SHEA,  JOHN  B. 
SHEEHAN,  DR.  T.  S. 
STUART,  GEORGE  E. 
SULLIVAN,  J    H. 
SUTTON,  C.    A. 


TUTTLE,  J.  M. 

WALES,  S.  WALTER 
WELCH,  THOMAS  F. 
WHEELER,  L.  E. 
WRIGHT,  HARRY  E. 


16 


C  O  N  X  R  I  B  U  "TO  R  S 


R.  L.  Agassiz 

Mrs.  Win.  H.  Ames 

American  Humane  Educational  Society 

"A.  R.  B." 

Batchelder  Bros. 

Mr.  Walter  C.  Baylies 

Miss  Emilj  E.  Beebe 

E.  Pierson  Beebe 

Mrs.  J.  Arthur  Beebe 

Mrs.  Arthur  W.  Blake 

Miss  Mary  Lee  Blake 

Boston  EIe\ated  Railway  Co. 

Peter  C.  Brooks 

Lucius  A.  Brown 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  B.  Bryant 

Stephen  Bullard 

"  Bucephalus  " 

C.  A.  Campbell 

Samuel  Carr 

Miss  Martha  Anna  Clark 

Eliot  C.  Clarke 

Miss  Grace  G.  Cowing 

Miss  Clemence  Crafts 

George  G.  Crocker 

Frederic  Cunningham 

Miss  Evelyn  Curtis 

Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Uwight 

Miss  Julia  F.  Eaton 

Miss  Sarah  B.  Fay 

Frederic  P.  Fish 

Mrs.  Albert  L.  Fisher - 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Reginald  Foster 

"  A  Friend  " 

Mrs.  Edward  Frothingham 

"  Friends  " 

Ginn  i\:  Co. 

Edward  W.  Grew 

George  G.  Hall 

G.  W.  Harrington 

Mrs.  Mary  H.  Hayes 

H.  P.  Hood  .^  Sons 

Mrs.  John  E.  Hudson 

Mrs.  Geo.  Abbott  James 

Mrs.  C.  W.  Kennard 

B.  F.  Keith 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  A.  Kidder 

Otto  G.  Kunhardt 


Amory  A.  Lawrence 
Mrs.  R.  Ashton  Lawrence 
Miss  Madeline  Lawrence 
Joseph  Lee 

Mrs.  Margaret  C.  Leland 
Miss  Helen  Loring 
Mrs.  Thacher  Loring 
Miss  Georgina  Lowell 

F.  H.  Manning 
Mrs.  T.J.  Marble 
Miss  E.  F.  Mason 
Mass.  S.  P.  C.  A. 
Miss  Madeline  C.  Mixter 
Miss  Marjory  S.  D.  Moors 
John  T.  Morse,  Jr. 
Miss  Ellen  F.  Moseley 

Mrs.  David  Nevins 

Mrs.  Wm.  L.  Parker 
Misses  Parsons 
Henry  Penn 
F.  A.  Peters 
Mrs.  J.  C.Phillips 
D.  L.  Pickman 
Wallace  L.  Pierce 
A.  E.  Pillbury 
Thomas  G.  Plant 
Mrs.  Sarah  G.  Putnam 
W.  D.  Quimby 
C.  S.  Rackemann 

Mrs.  A.  W.  Ramage 
Dr.  W.  L.  Richardson 
Miss  Emma  Rodman 
Richard  M.  Saltonstall 
Francis  Shaw 
"A.  W.  S.- 
Mrs. Francis  Skinner 
Mrs.  Robert  S.  Sturgis 
Henry  W.  Swift 
Col.  Thomas  Talbot 
Miss  Katherine  A.  Tarbell 
Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer 
Mrs.  Charles  Thorndike 
Samuel  D.  Warren 
J.  Weir 

George  Wigglesworth 
Franklin  O.  Williams 
Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington 


17 


LONDON  MIXTURE 

BREtKFtST  TEA 


1^: 


Better  than  Coffee 
Richer  than  Coffee 
Seven-Eighths  Coffee 


Fosters  ^l^  Bottling 

BASS'  ALE 
CUINNESS'  STOUT 


The  Largest  Bottlers  in  the  World  of 
BASS'  ALE 

The  Best  and  Most  Careful  Bottlers  of 
CUINNESS'  STOUT 


S.S.PIERCEGO.,Agts.,BO$TON 


18 


VETERAN   DRIVER    CLASS. 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society,  through  Geo.  T.  Angell,  Esq.,  offers 
a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in  the  parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous 
time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer,  or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer. 
The  Association  gives  a  second  prize  of  five  dollars  and  also  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver 
entered  in  this  class  (the  prize  winner  excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years 
or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Years 

of 
Service 

Batchelder  Bros. 

20 

Curtis,  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

20 

City  of  Boston,  Sanitary  Dept. 

20 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

21 

Curtis,  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

21 

City  of  Boston,   Sanitary  Dept. 

22 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

24 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

24 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

24 

Curtis,  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

25 

Oak  Grove  Farm  Co. 

25 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

25 

John  Miller  &  Co. 

27 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son 

30 

Henry  Craft's  Sons 

34 

City  Laundry  Co. 

34 

P.    O'Riorden  Estate 

40 

Henry    Craft's    Sons 

43 

DENNIS  CROWLEY 
W.  W.  CURRIE 
PATRICK  TOOMEY 
HIRAM  EMERY 
ANDREW  ],  MELDEN 
JOHN  B.  CARR 
PHILIP  CAREY 
MELVILLE  DICKIE 
CLARENCE  H.  JONES 
THOMAS  HICKS 

PATRICK  ].  Mcdonough 
JAMES  McLean 

JOHN  O'BRIEN 
FRANCIS  P.  BUCKMAN 
R.  McINTIRE 
SOLON  J.  RICHARDSON 
D.  DELOUREY 
THOMAS  COLBERT 

(This  veteran  driver,  being  now  a  stable  foreman,  is  not 
eligible  for  a  prize,  but  receives  a  special  medal.) 


JAMES  HOLLAND 


P.    O'Riorden    Estate 


43 


The  Veteran  Driver's  prize  "^vas  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the  Metropolitan 
Coal  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years;  in  1905  by  Thomas  Halev,  an  employee  of 
the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.,  with  a  record  of  40  years;  in  1906  by  P.  Callaghan,  emplojed  by 
the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation  for  38  years;  in  1906  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  the 
W.  T.  &  A.  G.  Van  Nostrand  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years:  in  1907  by  John  Francis 
Kelley,  employed  by  R.  O.  Brigham  for  42  years. 


19 


30  CONGRESS  STREET 


CO. 


20 


CLASS  1— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  A 

First  Prize  :  Silver  Medal  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 
Second  Prize:  Five  dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Third  Prize  :   Five  dollars,  offered  bj  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Fourth  and  Fifth  Prizes  :  Three  dollars  each,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In   addition,  the   judges  may   award   so   many  "Highly   Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes  of 
one  dollar  each,  as  thev  mav  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 
Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 
Service 

. 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

(Not  in  Competition) 

John  Boyle 

King  Coal 

23 

17 

2 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thos.  Blessington 

Russell  Sage 

16 

10 

3 

.. 

Tim.  J.  Driscoll 

Tom 

16 

10 

4 

Maiden  Coal  Co. 

Leo.  D.  Chicoine 

Ned 

18 

10 

5 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Michael  Conley 

Donald 
Sam 

16 

15 

10 
10 

6 

Taylor  Bros.   Laundry,  Inc. 

John  M.  Bryant 

Gold  Dust 

23 

10 

7 

J.  W.  McEnany 

J.  N.  Gildred 

Dinny 

H 

II 

8 

P.  Hurley 

Jaines  Mullen 

Bob 

15 

I  I 

9 

Henry  Craft's  Sons 

Thos.  Mahoney 

Mike 
Nigger 

15 

II 
II 

lO 

Cutter,  Smith  &  Co. 

J.  Shannon 

Fannie 

20 

I  I 

1 1 

Edw.  A.  Sears 

Wm.  J.  Morrissey 

Grace 

25 

II 

12 

C.  Capillo  &  Co. 

Chas.  N.  Capillo 

Dick 

25 

12 

13 

Case  &  Dodge 

0.  W.  Butler 

Ned 

'5 

12 

'4 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

John  E.  Marcou 

Billy 

16 

12 

15 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

Walter  East 

Jumbo 

18 

12 

16 

Johnson  Bros. 

C.  E.  Biathrow 

Nigger 
Dolly 

18 
19 

12 
12 

21 


Til  m  F. 


Eli , 


I NTERIOR 
DECORATORS 

Draperies,  Wall 
Papers,  Wall  Hang- 
ings, Furniture, 
Carpets,  Decorative 
Painting,  Plain  Paint- 
ing, Papier  Mache, 
Furniture  Coverings, 
Rugs 

TELEPHONE    MAIN    6640 


8  BOSIBTH  STREET 


22 


T 


CLASS  I— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  B 

First  Prize  :  Silver  Medal,  offered  b_y  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 
Second  Prize  :  Five  dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Third  Prize  :  Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Fourth  Prize  :  Three  Dollars,  offered  bj  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize  :  Three  Dollars,  offered  bj  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended''  ribbons,  with  prizes  of  one 
dollar  each,  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

tf 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 
Service 

17 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Daniel  Cantelo 

Baby  No.  1 

20 

13 

1 
1 

iS 

McGreevey  &  Co. 

J.  F.  Lohan 

Billy 

iS 

'3 

19 

The  Hoyt  Co. 

W.  B.  Lockhart 

Ben 

27 

13 

20 

P.  O'Riorden  Estate 

C.  Kirby 

Billy 
John 

19 
19 

31 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Wm.  Entwistle 

Baby 

20 

14 

i 

22 

A.  E.  Kenney 

James  B.  Orr 

Jack 

20 

H 

23 

C.  H.  Nichols  &  Bro. 

Wm.  Regan 

Kate 

20 

H 

1 

24 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

James  Mann 

Dolly 

31 

H 

! 

25 

Dudley  Whitney 

Henry  A.  DeLano 

Tom 

32 

H 

1 

26 

T.  Harry  Casey,  Jr. 

T.  H.  Casey,  Jr. 

Dandelion 

20 

15 

i 

27 

H.  H.  Fisher 

Theo.  H.  Fisher 

Ned 

23 

15 

27a 

H.  P.  Oakman's  Sons 

E.  P.  Oakman 

Simson 

23 

15 

J 

28 

Frank  S.  Murphy 

J.  H.  Stone 

Jerry 

25 

15 

f 

29 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry,  Inc. 

John  F.  Bibber 

Dick 

32 

15 

i 

30 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

Peter  McDonald 

Dan 
Tom 

20 

iS 

15 

23 


If 

Our 

Horses 

Please 

You 

Try 

Our 

Laundry 

Work 


COLLECTIONS   MADE  IN 
ROSLIPMD    A     L 


TDORCHESTE  R 
SOUTH  BOSTON 
BROOKLINE 


W    BACK   BAY   AND   CITY 

m 


ECTc;;r-[;KriP 
lOSTON 


TELEPHONE,  283  ROXBURY 


w. 


City 

Dundry 

€.  n.  ^  T.  B.  Cunningham,  Proprietors 


$2  to  9$  (Ue$t  Ccnox  $l 


I 


24 


CLASS  J— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  C 


First  Prize  :  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dvvight. 
Second  Prize  :  Five  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Third  Prize  :  Five  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fourth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize  :  Three  dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended"  ribbons  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No. 
1      of 
Gibbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 
Service 

31 

Del  lea  Bros. 

Wm.  J.Casey 

Bill 

23 

15 

32 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Christopher  Malone 

Billy 

23 

15 

33 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

(This  horse  won  the  silver  medal  in  1906) 

G.  C.  Lienhard 

Major 

25 

15 

34 

H.  H.  Bradford 

Geo.  S.  Hull 

Bill 

27 

15 

35 

Sumner's  Market 

Frank  Duggan 

Black  Kate 

19 

16 

36 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Jas.  McLean 

Lizzie 

22 

16 

37 

(I          it 

W.  S.  Lockhart 

Jim 
Tom 

22 
22 

16 
16 

3S 

<t             n 

E.  T.  Higgins 

Nigger 

23 

17 

39 

Coleman  Bros. 

Patrick  Doherty 

Pinkey 

24 

16 

40 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

M.  Fortune 

Fanny  Smith 

23 

16 

41 

John  J.  Kenney 

T.  W.  Kenney 

Frank 

22 

n 

\ 

42 

Hennessy  Bros. 

P.  J.  McClean 

Noble 
Charlie 

22 

17 

43 

P.  O'Riorden  Instate 

D.  Delourey 

Tom 

23 

18 

25 


C  F.   HOVEY  &  CO 

IMPORTERS  AND  RETAILERS  OF 

DRY  GOODS 


Sole   Agents   for   Boston   for    the    Celebrated 

Alexandre  Kid  Gloves 


MEDALS    AWARDEDTHE    MANUFACLURERS    AT 
EVERY     WORLD'S     FAIR 


3  3  Summer  St.    .*.    42  Avon  St,  Bostor 

ESTABLISHED    l8^^  TELEPHONE    3146   OXFORl 

WHIPPLE  &  COMPANY,  Inc. 

TRUCKMEN 

office: 

166  ESSEX  STREET,  BOSTON 


STANDS. 

Corner  Lincoln  and  Tufts  Sts.  Corner  Pearl  and  Purchase  St'-. 

69  Chauncy  Street.  Milton  Place.  '      \ 

218  Purchase  Street. 

2G  I 


CLASS  3  — FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 


The  Judges  may  avv;ud  such  ribbons  as  thej  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

62 

Boston  Fire  Dept. 

John  F.  McBride 

I 

63 

11        i(        u 

Eugene  C.  McCarthy 

I 

64 

" 

Thos.  F.  McFarland 

2 

65 

u          11           u 

Geo.  A.  Edson 

3 

66 

Boston  Protective  Dept. 

Jas.  Stewart  Weir 

2 

67 

Medford  Fire  Dept. 

Judson  A.  Hanson 

2 

68 

U                  (I              (( 

Fred  E.  Samson 

2 

69 

Somerville  Fire  Dept. 

Harry  F.  Biickman 

2 

CLASS  4  — U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  thej  deem  to  be  deserved,  and  the  Association  offers  a 
special  prize  of  five  dollars  for  the  best  horse. 


70  Thomas  G.  Connors 

71  Herbert  R.  Sumner 


Thomas  G.  Connors  i 

Herbert  R.  Sumner  i 


CLASS  5  -  MAIL  CARRIERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


72  P.  O'Riorden  Estate 

73 

74 

75  "  "" 


Philip  Reagan 
T.  Carroll 
T.  Sullivan 
J.  Smith 


29 


New  England's  Largest,  Best  Lighted 
and  Best  Ventilated 

RETAIL    STORE 


A  PLEASANT  PLACE  TO  SHOP 


HENRY    SIEGEL    CO. 


TELEPHONE,    612    RICHMOND 

United   Basket  Co. 

BASKETS 
STRAWBERRY  CRATES,   ETC. 


16  Fulton  Place,  Boston 


30 


CLASS  6 -CITIES  AND  TOWNS 


PARK  DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  maj  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

76 

City 

of  Boston 

(P< 

irk  Dept.) 

Jas.  O'Neil 

I 

77 

Jas.  J.  O'Brien 

I 

78 

Dennis  Daly 

I 

79 

Patrick  Daily 

2 

So 

George  Van  Tassell 

2 

Si 

Michael  Condry 

2 

82 

Jere  Cronin 

2 

S3 

Jas.  Melynn 

2 

84 

Patrick  Sheehan 

2 

CLASS  7  — CITIES  AND  TOWNS 

BRIDGE,  SANITARY  AND  WATER  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved.  In  this  class  Mr.  Benjamin  W. 
Wells,  formerly  Superintendent  of  Streets,  offers  a  special  prize  of  ten  dollars  for  the  best  old  horse, 
the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


85 

City  of  Boston 

(Bridge  Dept.) 

John  J,  Green 

-   J 

86 

(San.  Dept.) 

Patrick  Burke 

87 

(( 

John  J.  Murphy 

88 

(( 

Patrick  Toomey 

89 

(( 

John  B.  Carf 

90 

(Water  Dept.) 

Michael  F.  Burke 

2 

31 


^ 

Jordan   Marsh   Co. 

ESTABLISHLD    1851 

THE   MERCANTILE   HEART   OF   NEW   ENGLAND 

Our  Standard  Always  the   Highest  Our  Stock  Always  the  Largest 

Our  Prices  Absolutely    the    Lowest 


I  BUILDING 


The  Main    Store — Washinarton,    Sum-  Subway  undtr  Avon  Street  connecting  The  House-furnishing  Annex,— Avon> 

iner  and  Avon  Streets.       The  Largest,  our  Two  Great  Stores.  Chauncy,   and   Bedford   Streets.     The 

Most  Progressive,   and    Most    Liberal  Largest  Store  in  New  England  devot- 

Store  in  New  England.  ed    exclusively    to     Furniture,    Floor 

Coverings,  Draperies, Wall  Papers, etc. 

I  HEADQUARTERS  FOR  I 

I     Horse  Clothing,  Whips,  Crops    I 

I  Carriage    and    Auto    Robes  J 


Z  ROESSLE  BREWERY 

PREMIUM  LACER  BEER 

IN  WOOD  OR   BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  highest  type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Qiiality,  Age,  Substance, 
Purity  and  Aroma,  and  is  Absolute  Perfection 


ESTABLISHED     1S46 


OFFICE,     BREWERY     AND     BOTTLING     DEPARTMENT 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE  -  BOSTON 

32 


CLASS  8  — MASTER  TRUCKMEN^S  AND  CONTRACTORS' 
RUNABOUT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  one  first,  one  second  and  one  third  ribl;on,  and  so  many  highly  com- 
mended ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NANE 


No. 

of 

Horses 


91 

Augusteen  P.  Chadbourne 

A.  P.  Chadbourne 

93 

William  Gilligan 

Co. 

Jas.  T.  Gilligan 

93 

n              u 

Chas.  Wagner 

94 

J.  P.  O'Riorden 

P.  O'Riorden 

95 

U                          (( 

J.  L.  Manning 

96 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Arthur  R.  Johnson 

97 

Chas.  G.  Parmenter 

Chas.  G.  Parmenter 

98 

G.  W.  Reed 

G.  W.  Reed 

CLASS  9  — TRUCKMEN^S  SINGLES 

DIVISION  A 
The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


99 

Henry  S.  Barron 

Chas.  A.  Clouse 

99a 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Ernest  Marsh 

99b 

(<                     (; 

Henry  Marsh 

100 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Chas.  S.  Moore 

lOI 

u                 a                   li 

Daniel  Hayes 

102 

((                 ((                    (( 

Dennis  McCarthy 

103 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

N.  W.  Currier 

104 

William  C.  Bray 

E.  P.  Mclntyre 

105 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

Thos,  F.  Lyons 

ic6 

" 

Joseph  F.  Murray 

107 

(( 

George  H.  Berg 

108 

Joseph  Costa 

Joseph  Costa 

109 

R.  J.  Elder 

P.  Joseph  F.  Kelly 

no 

Frost  Forwarding  &  Tran.  Co. 

Lawrence  E.  Savage 

33 


f^ 


m 


^S\ 


'NAME     ON     EVERY     PIECE" 


]0W]s(Ey5  (hocolate  T3onbons 


REG.    U.    S.    PAT.    OF 


■Why  is  it  you  can  eat   freely  of   these  Delicious 
Chocolates  and  still  be  happy?     >Vhy  is  it? 

RETAIL  STORE 

416  WASHINGTON  ST.,  near  SUMMER  ST. 

SODA  ICES  BONBONS 


o^dt%e^uij 


Our  Horses   are 

satisfied  zuit/i 

their  jobs 


Try  ''Oxford 

Chocolates','  and yoii 

u nil  be  satisfied,  too 


<^^^^^  ^y^^^^^^;^^^  ^/^^/^^^ 


34 


TRUCKMEN^S  SINGLES  —  Division  A  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


I  I  I 

I  12 

"3 
114 

116 

117 
118 


M.  J.  Gallagher 
Frank  Gnecco 
H.  B.  Gould 


Louis  Greenberg 
O'Riorden  Forwarding  Co. 


Jas.  J,  VVillock 
Frank  Gnecco 
Jas.  J.  Crowley 
Jeremiah  A.  Crowley 
Fred  H.  Gould 
Louis  Greenberg 
J.  Morrisey 
W.  Crowley 


DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  mav  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


119 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

120 

(I 

121 

'' 

122 

S.  B.  Holman 

123 

R.  A.  Kennett 

124 

A.  W.  Knight 

125 

T.  J.  McCarthy 

126 

J.  W.  McEnany 

127 

(( 

128 

li 

129 

G.  W.  Reed 

130 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son 

131 

a                  a 

132 

n                   u 

133 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

134 

u            u 

^35 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

136 

((                u 

138 

W.  C.  Webber  Co. 

Fred  Hassellbrack 
Joseph  Sullivan 
J.  H.  Newcomb 
John  McQuaide 
Henry  Harvey 
John  J.  Mahoney 
John  Hurley 
John  Sweeney 
Frank  Sullivan 
B.  M.  Flaherty 
Robert  Tedmon 
George  L.  Morandi 
John  E.  Lynch 
Charles  Hill 
John  Magner 
Michael  Welch 
Wm.  B.  Loud 
Fred  Vance 
Remus  Bert 


35 


POUND  CAKE 

^^  MACAROONS 

QUALITY 

BAKERY  —  Cleanest  and  flost  flodern  in  the  World 

PRODUCT Made  from  the  Purest>nd  Best  flaterials 

that  money  can  buy 

HORSES  —  Blue  Ribbon   Winners 

DRAKE  BROTHERS  COMPANY 

HIGH    CLASS    BAKING 

BLUE  HILL  AVE.  and  SAVIN  ST.,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


The    Best  M99IK/9m  ^^^    ^^^^ 

Horses   in  llNffSlnll  Goods    in 

the  Parade  hMBIMM  the  World 


Austin  BisGuit  (bmpany. 


36 


CLASS  10— TRUCKMEN'S  DOUBLES  AND  THREES 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


i3Sa 
i3Sb 

139 

140 

141 

142 

H3 
144 

145 
146 
147 
14S 
149 

15.3 
154 
155 
156 

157 
158 

159 
160 


Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Boston  Ele\ated  Railway  Co. 
W.  C.  Bray 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

A.  P.  Chadbourne 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

R.  J.  Elder 

Frost  Forwarding  &  Transfer  Co. 

((  u  a 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 


James  H.  Hayes 
O'Riorden  Forwarding  Co. 


S.  Girroin 

2 

Wm.  Lane 

2 

Thomas  Murray 

2 

Wm.  M.  Parrot 

2 

Fred  Feyler 

2 

Patrick  J.  Dooley 

2 

Wm.  S.  McKendry 

2 

C.  H.  Weeden 

2 

Gust  Samson 

2 

James  J.  Leonard 

2 

Jerry  Lucey 

2 

Bernard  Peterson 

2 

E.  R.  Roseberg 

2 

Walter  W.  Trider 

2 

Jerry  Leonard 

2 

Lewis  Lampron 

2 

Albert  Arthur 

2 

Fred  Downie 

2 

Andrew  Taylor 

2 

Cornelius  Haley 

2 

T.  Sullivan 

2 

Richard  Merritt 

2 

D.  Doyle 

2 

T.  Tomkins 

3 

37 


John  M.  Woods          E.  D.  Walker          W.  E.  Chamberlain 

JOHN  M.  WOODS  &  CO. 

GEO.  G.  FOX  CO. 

WHOLESALE 
R   E  T  A   1    L 

Hardwood  Lumber 

AIR  DRIED  AND  KILM    DRIED 

RAkFRS 

SPECIALTIES 

MAHOGANY     WHITEWOOD 
QR.  SYCAMORE       CHERRY 
OAK           ASH            WALNUT 

223  to  239  Bridge  St. 

UAilxLIVO 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Cambridge  1430 

CHARLESTOWN,   MASS. 

«:$«^«S«^3S««S;$«3S:$-$«;-5=S«3«««S«S--S«3 


SR.    H.   WHITE   CO.i 


it/ 
ib 
iii 

ifi 
it; 
iki 
\(/ 
i(/ 

\)/ 
\b 
\i/ 
\i/ 


IN  THE  MEN'S  STORE,  2d  FLOOR 
OFFER  COMPLETE  STOCK  OF 

Men's  Clothing,  Shoes,   Hats 
and  Furnishings 

AT  THE  LOWEST   PRICES   IN   BOSTON 

3S 


ilu 
vto 
Hi 
Hi 

mi 
Hf 

Hi 

Hi 

Hi 


TRUCKMEN'S  DOUBLES  AND  THREES  — Continued 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  thej  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 
Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNERS    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horses 

l6l 

R.  A.  Kennett 

Con  McCarthy 

3 

162 

u 

Elwood  Demeritt 

2 

163 

u                u 

George  Benham 

3 

164 

u                 a 

Reuben  Keith 

2 

165 

u                 a 

John  Gilpin 

2 

166 

a                 u 

Daniel  Healey 

3 

167 

T.  J.  McCarthy 

Patrick  Clancy 

2 

i68 

U                       (( 

John  Sullivan 

3 

169 

((                (( 

Dennis  Kennedy 

2 

170 

((                    u 

Florence  Sullivan 

2 

171 

J.  W.  McEnany 

Joseph  A.  McDonald 

2 

173 

((                     u 

John  Ahearn 

3 

173 

a                 ^(, 

Joe  Ahearn 

3 

174 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Joseph  W.  Harris 

3 

175 

.. 

Alfred  Vance 

2 

176 

.. 

Jas.  B.  McWilliams 

3 

177 

G.  W.  Reed 

Kenneth  McCharles 

2 

1 78 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son 

Francis  P,  Bwckman 

2 

179 

Henry  R.  Spinney 

Henry  R.  Spinney 

2 

I  So 

• 
L.  A.  Waterhouse 

Wm.  F.  Meese 

2 

1 80a 

a                    il 

R.  A.  Davidson 

2 

181 

N.  Ward  Co. 

Archie  MacDonald 

3 

39 


COIPLIINTS  Of 


]k  Carter's  tt  Company 


AM  k  iiniis 

ft^ANUFACTUR[RS  OF  ALL  KINDS  OF 

lOOEN  BOXES 
PACKING  CASES 


i 


TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 

FACTORY    AND    OFFICE 


Carter  St.  anil  Foyrtft  St. 

CHELSEA,  IIIASS, 


Dea/ers  in 

rmNf  Iamb,  Veal^  BeeFp 

Pork  AM B  Poultry. 

I5FANEUIL  HALL  MARKETS FANEUILHALLSQUAPE.^^J^  MERCHANTS  ROW. 


IRosToN^J^ss. 


40 


CLASS   U— TRUCKMEN^S  FOURS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved.  Also,  the  Lawrence  Gold 
Medal  is  awarded  for  the  best  four-horse  team  in  this  class,  provided  that  the  horses  are  taken  care  of 
bj  the  driver,  and  excluding  any  previous  winner  of  the  medal.  Under  these  rules  the  Boston  Elevated 
Railway  Company's  team  is  excluded,  and  also  R.  J.  Elder's,  which  won  the  medal  in  1906,  and  R.  A. 
Kennett's  team,  which  won  the  medal  in  1907,  so  that  the  competition  for  the  medal  this  year  is 
between  Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co.,  Jas.  H.  Hayes,  J.  W.  McEnany,  and  O'Riorden  Forwarding  Co. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

,S,a 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

M.  Devereux 

4 

182 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

David  Regan 

4 

183 

R.  J.  Elder 

Fred  Lavoie 

4 

I  84 

James  H.  Hayes 

Chas.  Harrington 

4 

185 

R.  A.  Kennett 

Levi  Clark 

4 

186 

J.  W.  McEnany 

Phillip  H.  Boyd 

4 

IS7 

O'Riorden  Forwarding  Co, 

R.  Beaton 

4 

188 

u                         a                 a 

J.  Maloy 

4 

CLASS   12  — CONTRACTORS 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


1 89 

Coleman  Bros. 

190 

U                       (( 

191 

((                ii 

192 

u                 ;; 

193 

tt                 a 

194 

u                 a 

195 

Mathew  E.  Nawn 

196 

Wm.  Gilligan  Co. 

197 

a                     a 

198 

" 

199 

(4                             H 

Lambert  Burk 
Jos.  Connell 
Jas.  Barr 
Wm.  Barr 
Ernest  Towle 
Hugh  Connors 
Michael  Hawkins 
E.  Wagner 
E.  Fitzgerald 
Plummer  Noyce 
Wm.  Donecliff 


There  is  Safety  and 
Economy  in  Using 
HOOD'S      MILK 


A  perfect  Milk  is  a  perfect  food  because 
it  furnisiies  every  element  needed  to 
build  a  perfect  body.  Wholesome 
milk  of  the  present  high  standard  is  an 
economical  F(JOD,  which  families  of 
moderate  income  may  freely  purchase 
as  a  means  of  improving  the  character 
of  the  diet  and  of  cheajjening  the  cost 
of  the  supply  of  animal  foods. 

Hood's  Milk  is 
PURE,  CLEAN  and  SAFE 

It  has  stood  the  test  of  ir  ore 
than  60  years 

Our  lUustrated  Booklet  on  Serving-  Cream  just  out 
Sent  free  on  application 

H.  P.  Hood  t^"  Sons 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 
MILK,  CREAM  and  all  DAIRY  PRODUCTS 

494  Rutherford  Ave. 

Charlestown,  Mass. 

'Phone  Charlestown   600 


For   Over    37    Years 

VV^E  HAVE   BEEN 

MAKERS  OF 

Good  Harness 

and  Collars 
J  AS.  FORGIE'S  SONS 

1 9  and  20  South  Market  St. 

Albany  St.  and  Massachusetts  Ave. 

BOSTON 


Our   Ribbon    Prize    Rosettes, 

Medals,  Metal  Horse  Shields,  Etc. 

MADE    BY 

Boston  Badge 
Company 


629    Old    South    Building 

O/^CTT^^]^  A.   J.    BERGE,    Representing 

42 


CONTRACTORS  — Division  A  — Continued 


Ribbon 

No. 
of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

"o°f 
Horses 

200 

Win 

.  Gilligan  &.  Co. 

C.  Scrowm 

2 

201 

Wm.  McKenna 

2 

202 

Thos.  Kennedy 

2 

203 

Jacob  Nelson 

2 

204 

John  May 

2 

205 

Thos.  McCarthy 

2 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


206 

Mrs.  M.  E.  Broderick 

Patrick  Walsh 

2 

207 

a                        it 

Jas.  A.  McDonald 

2 

30S 

John  T.  Connors 

Martin  O'Brien 

2 

209 

Mrs.  H.  M.  Dunning 

George  G.  Braley 

I 

210 

" 

Judson  Doyle 

I 

211 

u                        a 

John  McDonald 

I 

212 

J    T.  Noone 

C.  H.  Chamberlin 

2 

213 

ii            a 

Michael  Ratigan 

2 

214 

a           u 

J.  Lewis 

2 

215 

C.  W.  Reed 

John  McCue 

2 

216 

a             a 

M.  McGreil 

2 

217 

P.  O'Riorden  Estate 

T.  Sullivan 

2 

218 

M.  Sullivan 

2 

219 

J.  Mahoney 

2 

220 

C.  Haley 

2 

221 

M.  Welch 

2 

222 

M.  Maher 

2 

222a 

John  T.   Scully 

Michael  Curran 

■f 

43 


J.G.H.  8,  FERGUSON  CO, 


< 
or 

-I 
< 

u 

CO 

III 

I- 


Leaii 
El 


J»S  G.  FERGUSON,  Pres. 
BENNETT  S.  FERGUSON,  Treas. 


00 

m 


B' 


WOOL  SQUAItE 

BLANKETS 


BEST  BLANKET  F 
LOOK  FOR  THE  THREE 


HEAD  TRADE  MARK 
HACK  ROBES  LOOK  FOR  THE 

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BAY  STATE  FUEL 


Bi-t  A  Consolidation  of  the  Old  Firm  of  RICHARDSON  &  BACON  with  BAKER-HUNNEWEIL 


GENERAL  OFFICE  AND  WHARVES 


15?  MAIN  STREET,        CAMBRIDGE 

Brancti  Office  in  Boston       -      -      -      -      121  CAMBRIDGE  STREET 

D.onnh  nffinno  in  Pomhririrrr.   J  ^24  Massactiusctts  Avenuo         Contral  street 
Brancn  unices  in  immm   I1336  lassactiusetts  Avenue      Harvard  Square 


44 


CLASS    13  — COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


Ho. 

of 

Ribbon 

Ho. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Ko. 

of 

Horses 

233 

E.  J.  Babcock 

Jos.  Dwyer 

224 

((                  u 

John  A.  Watson 

225 

U                      ii 

Jos.  A.  Leach 

226 

U                     (( 

Frank  Wright 

337 

J.  J.  O'Brien 

Jere  Tobin 

228 

U                  ii. 

Patrick  Tobin 

239 

11           a 

Harry  Martell 

230 

u            a 

Walter  E.  Higgins 

231 

New  England  Gas  &  Coke 

Co. 

Felix  J.  Baldwin 

3 

232 

((          ((                  ( 

' 

Ralph  L.  Wallace 

4 

CLASS 

u— 

COAL  SINGLES 

The  Judj 

jes  may  award  such  ribbons 

as  they 

deem  to  be  deserved. 

233 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Dennis  Sullivan 

234 

a                  (c 

Albert  Cooley 

235 

u 

Patrick  Bannon 

336 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

N.  Daly 

237 

;; 

Matthew  Donovan 

237r 

I        Boston  Industrial  Home 

John  Anderson 

338 

John  A.  Bradford  Coal  Co 

John  Baker 

239 

((                      t; 

Jeremiah  Haggerty 

240 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coa 

1  Co. 

Barnett  Portnoi 

241 

i(              (( 

Michael  Connell 

242 

(I                   a 

Samuel  Freedman 

243 

.; 

Patrick  Gallagher 

244 

Henry  Craft's  Sons 

F.  McCarthy 

245 

tt             u 

Michael  Mahoney 

246 

Martin  Gilbert 

Martin  F.  Sullivan 

247 

a 

John  R.  Walsh 

248 

Martin  Godvin 

Thomas  Harkins 

t 

i   249 

(( 

James  J.  Godvin 

45 


C.  CAPILLO  &:  CO, 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

fS^  Choice  Wines 
^^  and  Liquors 

BOTTLERS    OF 

Ales,  Lager  Beer  and  Porter 


142-144 
COMMERCIAL      STREET 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  179  Richmond 


JOHN    SCHWALM 

SUCCESSOR  TO 

David   Myers  &   Co, 

Tailor 


516  and  517  Colonial  Building 

100   BOYLSTON  STREET 
BOSTON 

Telephone  1563-2  Oxford 


Snovv^,   Wheeler,   McElveen  and 
Cavanagh   Horse  Co. 


COMBINATION  SALE  STABLE 

C  Buyers  will  find  constantly  on  hand  a  large  assortment  of  every 
class  of  horse  at  lowest  prices. 

C  Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday  at  Com- 
bination Sale  Stables  at  lo  o'clock,  A.  M. 

C  All  horses  warranted  as  represented  or  money  refunded. 

CI,  Accommodations  for  over  300  horses. 

243  and  245  Friend  St.,  Boston 


Near  North  Union  Station 


Telephone,  505  Haymarket 


46 


i 


COAL  SINGLES  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

250 

McGreevey  &  Co. 

Thomas  McGreevey 

251 

a            (( 

John  Thompson 

252 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Jerry  O'Neil 

253 

(I              (( 

Christopher  F.  Willard 

254 

((                      u 

Thomas  E.  Grady 

255 

W.  H.  Pevear  &  Co. 

Patrick  Hughes 

256 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

Thomas  Dorgan 

257 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Thomas  McGovern 

258 

((             a 

Wm.  Hurst 

259 

Suffolk  Coal  Co. 

Wm.  Seaward 

CLASS  15  — COAL  DOUBLES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


260 

Batchelder  Bros. 

Martin  Nee 

2 

261 

((              (( 

Anthony  Stockman 

2 

262 

((              (( 

John  L.  Thomas 

2 

263 

a                  a 

Eugene  Sweeney 

2 

263a 

li                 a 

James  Madden 

2 

264 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co. 

Patrick  McCabe 

2 

265 

a                       li 

Patrick  McKusker 

2 

266 

C(                              u 

Robert  I.  Ward 

2 

267 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

Edward  Burke 

2 

267a 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

James  Gibson 

2 

26S 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

Peter  Smith 

2 

269 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Charles  VV.  Mackay 

2 

270 

U                                  ii 

Lewis  Goosby 

2 

271 

" 

Michael  Griffin 

2 

272 

Frank  E.  Newell 

George  Walden 

2 

27.3 

W.  H.  Pevear  &  Co. 

Martin  Faraher 

2 

274 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Michael  O'Neil 

2 

47 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


Ginn&  Company 

29  BEACON  STREET 
BOSTON 


The  Beer  that  Made  Milwaukee  Famous 


"jU^it: 


:^ 


JOS.  GAHM  &  SON 

General  N.  E.  Agents  of  the 
Jos.  Schlitz  Brewing  Co  ,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale    Dealers,    Importers  and 

Bottlers  of  High  Grade 

Goods  Only 

340-350  C  ST.,  SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


\ 


V.  P.  WHIKEMORE 

HAY  AND  GRAIN 


48 


CLASS    16  -COAL  THREES 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deservt 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

275 

Batchelder  Bros, 

Dennis  Crowley 

3 

276 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

John  Horrigan 

3 

377 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

John  Gibbons 

3 

278 

Staples  Coal  Co. 

James  Dority 

3 

CLASS  17— ICE 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


379  Fells  Ice  Co. 

380  Morrill-Atwood  Ice  Co. 

381  "  ''          "      " 

382  "  "          "     " 


Guilford   Saunders 
Harry  Kinsley 
Jas.  D.  Lynch 
Arthur  T.  Campbell 


CLASS  18  — LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  Ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


283 

Joseph  L.  Barry 

Jas.  Hanlon 

384 

Downes  Lumber  Co. 

Dennis  J.  Shea 

285 

((                      ((                  u 

Jas.  Sullivan 

386 

(I                  1.1.               a 

Chas.  Orsie 

2S7 

u                  a               n 

John  Fulton 

28S 

G.  H.  Jennings 

Warren  Belding 

289 

Pope  &  Cottle 

E.  J.  Thomas 

289a 

;c                   a 

James  Riley 

289b 

u                 u 

John  Riley 

389c 

((                 (( 

John   Sullivan 

290 

Curtis,  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

Thos.  Hicks 

291 

((               a            a               u 

Andrew  Melden 

2 

392 

tl                      tt                  4t                      u 

Jas.  Hoag 

2 

293 

ki                a             ii               a 

Wm.  Currie 

2 

294 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 

N.  R.  Merrifield 

2 

49 


^^^ 

Nathan  F.  Tufts          Established  iSti          Charles  E.  Fitz 

Compliments  of 

A.     E.     BLISS 

GENERAL  SUPERINTENDENT 

Nathan  Tufts  &  Sons 

Grain,  Meal,  Feed, 
Hay  and  Straw 

Maiden   Electric    Co. 

POULTRY  AND  PIGEON  FEED 

Maiden  and  Melrose  Gas  Light  Co. 

Bunker  Hill  Elevator,    59  Cambrid§:e  St. 
Charlestown 

Near  East  Somerville  Station,  B.  &  M.  R.  R. 

^^?^ 

Main  Office,          Warren  Bridge 

CHARLESTOWN,    MASS. 

Established  1871                                                      Telephone  1676 

MORGAN  &  BOND 

Importers  and  Dealers  in 

Samncrij  aim  carnage  KooHs 

22  Federal  and  121  Congress  Sts. 
BOSTON 

J.  T.  TIGHE  COMPANY 

BEST  GRADES 

AND  STEAM  ^^f3.^^Iv 

LOWEST  CASH  PRICES 
Telephone  156  South  Boston 

Wharf,  First  Street,  Foot  of  F  St. 
Yard  -  -  331  West  Fourth  Street 

SOUTH  BOSTON 

I  C.   TALBOT 

Fancy  and  Staple 

Telephone,  Dorchester  796-J 

GROCERIES 

n57  Washington  St 
DORCHESTER 

ASSOCIATES'  BUILDING                 MILTON 

Established  US15 

lloiGliesleilGellonipoDy 

DORCHESTER 

50 


CLASS   19  — HAY  AND  GRAIN 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

'of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Mo. 

of 

Horses 

295 

Fulton  O'Brien 

C.  Jesson 

I 

296 

'' 

Daniel  Middy 

I 

297 

(( 

Edward  Murphy 

2 

29S 

u 

Philip  Kennedy 

2 

299 

W. 

P.  Whittemore  Co. 

Michael  Gormley 

I 

300 

John  Burke 

1 

301 

Wm.  Graham 

2 

302 

Duncan  Cusack 

2 

303 

Edward  Doyle 

2 

304 

Patrick  Cleary 

2 

305 

Bartholomew  Donovan 

2 

306 

Horace  Moody 

2 

307 

Timothy  Corcoran 

3 

308 

Edward  Conroy 

4 

CLASS  20-  METALS  AND  JUNK 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


k 


309 

Marks  Angel 

Benjamin  Oilman                                 i 

310 

D.  F.  Healey 

D.  F.  Healey                                        i 

3" 

Ike  Sandler 

Ike  Sandler                                            i 

312 

M.  R.  Segall 

Michael  Berkowich                               i 

313 

Harris  Shlomovitz 

Harris  Shlomovitz                                i 

51 


FEED 

B"^  — 

XTRAVOI  FEED  3IOL,ASSES 

keeps  the  stock  in  a  heultliy  condition. 
It  helps  assimilate  other  foods,  and 
cures  indigestion.  It  produces  a  glossy 
coat.  It  will  eradicate  worms.  Ask 
your  grocer  or  grain  dealer  for  XTRA- 
VIM,  or  send  for  inf orma-  . «  |)  j^  . 
tion  and  valuable  book  ^''^^  _  '  *\'^^ 
on  the  discovery  and   ^     /^      :*ii''S'  ~ 


use  of   molasses  as  gCVlK^lfJ^)  ^ 


applied  to  stock. 


V^'  f££/J 


BE  SUKE  TO  SEE  THIS    ^MOLASS^S H^' 

^-^  TKADEMARK.        ^f^ 


fcL*>ON>V>' 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


The 

Pureoxia 

Co. 


C.  Brigham  Company 


WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN 


flilk,  Cream  and  Butter 

158  HASSACHUSETTS  AVENUE 


CAMBRIDGE,  HASS. 


TELEPHONES,  262  and  263  CAMBRIDGE 


52 


CLASS  21  -BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horses 

3'4 

The  Atlantic  Works 

Frank  W.  Eldredge 

3^5 

li              (( 

Wm,  T.  Dunbar 

316 

The  Brockway-Smith  Corp. 

Frank  O.  Doughty 

317 

u 

Chas.  U.  Waitte 

318 

A.  Ceppi  &  Co. 

John  T.  Murphy 

319 

A.  X.  Crowley 

John  Connell 

330 

Cutter,  Smith  &  Co. 

Patrick  Smith 

321 

I.  Freedman    Co. 

Mike  Delano 

322 

a 

Wm.  M.  Clark 

323 

a 

Manuel  T.  Folger 

324 

Arthur  C.  Harvey  Co. 

A.  G.  Templeton 

325 

Lincoln  I.  Leighton 

Walter  S.  Newcomb 

326 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

T.  S.  Griffiths 

327 

U                        i.i 

W,  F.  Campbell 

328 

H.  P.  Oakman's  Sons 

Wm.  Flaherty 

329 

((                     u 

Patrick  Flaherty 

330 

Pierce  &  Cox 

Ernest  Eisner 

331 

G.  W.  &  F.  Smith  Iron  Co. 

Joseph  R.  Ayers 

4 

CLASS  22  —  BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS 


The  Judg 

;s  may  award  such  ribbo 

ns  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 

332 

C.  Capillo  &  Co. 

Chas.  Capillo 

1 

333 

a 

Dominick  Capillo 

I 

334 

Casper  Berry 

Wm.  W.  Borns 

I 

335 

a 

John  J.  Murphy 

2 

336 

Boston  &  Lowell  Bottl 

ng  Co. 

Simon  Millman 

1 

337 

u 

' 

' 

Mendel  Isenberg 

I 

33B 

Doherty  &  Daly 

Edward  J.  Ronan 

I 

339 

(( 

Jos.  H.  Doherty 

I 

n3 


SliatiucI  &  Jones 


tSTABLISHtD   1850 


FANEUIL  HALL  MARKET 


TELtPHONE 


COMENIS  OF  A  FRIEi 


54 


BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS  -  Continued 


Ribbon 

No. 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horses 

340 

Joseph  A.  Gahm 

Walter  Holm 

2 

341 

'^ 

Roger  S.  Keeler 

2 

342 

" 

Nichol  J.  Ruglin 

2 

343 

William  J.  Higgins 

Frank  J.  Higgins 

I 

344 

" 

D.  F.  Lalley 

I 

344a 

C.  H.  Lally 

Thos.  B.  Cheever 

I 

345 

John  Miller  &  Co. 

Robert  Keith 

2 

346 

Star  Brewing  Co. 

Peter  Maguive 

I 

347 

" 

Thos.  McCarthy 

2 

34S 

ii, 

Thos.  Comer 

2 

349 

44 

John  A.  Morehouse 

2 

350 

U 

Peter  Clasby 

2 

351 

k4 

Cornelius  Crowley 

2 

352 

Stillman  Bottling  Co. 

Joseph  Rocco 

I 

353 

(.i                              14 

Martin  Prestin 

I 

354 

u                  a 

Harry  Pearlman 

I 

355 

Windsor  Mineral  Springs  Co. 

John  J.  Casson 

I 

356 

C.  M.  Wheaton 

J.  H.  Rudd 

2 

357 

" 

Chas.  Patchett            (Mules) 

2 

CLASS  23  —  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


358 

359 
36Q 
361 
362 
363 
364 
365 


Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 


Fearing,  Whiton  &  Co.,  Inc. 

Keith's  Theatre 

Edward  J.  Ball 

A.  C.  &  M.  L.  Felkin  Co. 

J.  A.  McAuley 


J.  E.  Dempsey 
William  Norton 
John  O'Connor 
Jeremiah  Mahoney 
Maurice  J.  Flynn 
Almoh  B.  Pembroke 
Francis  A.  Dunn 
John  J.  Sullivan 


55 


RilENNETT 

TRUCKMAN 

AND 

FORWARDER 

6  FDLTOH  STREET 

BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,  30  RICHMOND 


TELEPHONE,  1710  BOXBURY 


Oak  Grove  Farm  Co. 

ALDEN  BROTHERS,  Proprietors 
WHOLESALE    AND     RETAIL 

fflilkandCream 


1171  Tremont  Street 

BOSTON 


Telephone,  112  South  Boston 

BOSTON  FLAG  POLE  CO. 

SPRUCE  AND 'cedar  POLES 

Spars,  Tent,  Flag,  Pike  and  Bean  Poles,  and 
Poles  for  Rustic  Fences 

Lignumvita'  Trucks,  Gilt  Balls  and  Halyards 

169  BROADWAY  EXTENSION    SOUTH  BOSTON 


Ne;ir  Dorche-ler  Avenue 


M.  DOHERTY 


H.  A.  DOHERTY 


MICHAEL  DOHERTY  &  CO. 

Importers  and 

Wholesale  Liquor  Dealers 

Sole  Imporlers  and  IVoprietors  of  tlie 
CELERKATKD   BKAXDS 

Royal  Dutch  Gin,  Imperial  Cognac  Brandy  and  Golden 
Sheaf  Rye  Whiskey 

184  to  192  Kneeland  St.     765  to  771  Atlantic  Ave. 

BOSTON 


[^ttEM«YSi^W5ffERBUKY0)MFANY, 


E.   S.   HARRIS 

TRUCKMAN 

Forwarder  of  Merchandise  of  all 

Descriptions  and  General 

Jobbing 

OFFICE 

197  South  Street  Boston 

Telephone  33   Oxford 


56 


MISCELLANEOUS  —  Continued 


Wo. 

of 

Ribbon 

Ho. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Ifo. 

of 

Horses 

366 

W.  H.  Naylor 

George  W.  Buchanan 

i 

367 

W.  L.  Sellon 

Frank  L.  Sellon 

I 

36S 

W.  Bowman  Cutter 

Charles  Estey 

1 

369 

" 

Edward  GiUis 

I 

370 

New  England  Maple 

Syrup  Co. 

Arthur  F.  Powers 

I 

371 

Boston  Bundle   Wood  Co. 

Richard  D.  Sanders 

2 

372 

M.  F.  Carroll 

John  P.  Carroll 

I 

373 

a              a 

Martin  F.  Carroll 

I 

374 

White  &  Leahy 

Edward  Bartlett 

1 

375 

W.  S.  Burbank  Co. 

Frank  FitzPatrick 

2 

376 

((              4; 

Samuel  Dowd 

2 

377 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

John  T.  Stewart 

2 

378 

The  Park  &  Pollard  Co. 

Thomas  P.  Cook 

2 

379 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

Melville  Dickie 

2 

380 

Tide  Water  Oil  Co. 

of  Mass. 

Robert  C.  Beard 

2 

CLASS  24  —  MANUFACTURERS'  SINGLES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


381 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Fred  Hoey 

382 

" 

E.  W.  Riley 

383 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co. 

Philip  Carey- 

384 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Michael  Riley 

385 

ii              a 

Patrick  O'Brien 

386 

11              It 

Charles  Whyte 

387 

- 

William  Kenney 

388 

John  A.  Dunn  Co. 

Elmer  N.  Keith 

389 

J.  Feldman 

Abraham  Berger 

390 

James  Holland 

Henry   Bateman 

391 

F.  A.  Horle 

Daniel  A.  Murphy 

THE  BOSTON 
WORK-HORSE    PARADE 

Is  a  Benefit  to  the  Horse. 
So  are 

RUBBERS 

Bearing  this 


A  Benefit  to  All  Mankind 

BOSTON 

RUBBER 

SHOE    CO 


Compliments  of 


Porter's   Market 

151  SUMMER  STREET 
BOSTON 


ESTABLISHED  1841 

W.   P.    STONE  &  CO. 

Manufacturers  of  "mi."         f.2iia 

WAGONS,  CARAVANS 
AND  SLEDS 

CARRIAGE  PAINTING 

REPAIRING  IN  ALL  BRANCHES 

175  and  179  West  First  Street 
South  Boston 


WHOLESALE 
GROCERS 


IMPORTERS  AND  JOBBERS 

Teas,  Colleesenfl  lotoses 

213  and  215  STATE  STREET 

BOSTON 


Edric  Eldridge 


Austin  L.  Baker 


GEORGE  ADAMS,    Manager 

Union  Steam  Sponging 
Works 

103  and   105  Bedford  Street 
BOSTON 

TELEPHONE.  OXFORD  90 

Cloth  Spongers  and  Refinishers 

London  Shrunk  Process 


W.  IVI.  ROBINSON 


HAY,  GRAIN  and 
POULTRY  FOOD 


ADAMS  AND   PARK   STREETS 
DORCHESTER 


58 


MANUFACTURERS'   SINGLES  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OAVNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


392 

393 
394 
395 
396 
397 
39S 
399 
400 


McKenney  &   Waterbury  Co. 

New  England  Bedding  Co. 
Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 
Union  Crate  Co. 
Union  Glass  Co. 
United  Basket  Co. 
Walworth  Manufacturing  Co. 


W.  E.  Salmon 
J.  C.  Reid 
S.  J.  Cashman 
John  H.  Galvin 
Charles  Cuneo 
John  J.  Brady 
John  Cuneo 
Frank  Bryant 
Charles  Rautenberg 


CLASS  25  — MANUFACTURERS'  DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


401 

Atwood  &  McManus 

John  Luzzatto 

2 

403 

" 

George  Nay 

2 

403 

tt                                  44 

John  A.  Campbell 

2 

404 

44                                     44 

E.  N.  Bryson 

2 

405 

44 

Joseph  J.  Cronin 

2 

406 

44                                     U 

Thomas  Barrett 

2 

407 

44                                     44 

Oliver  Marion 

2 

40S 

44                                     44 

Wm.  H.  Bryson 

2 

409 

E.  B.  Badger  &  Son  Co. 

Michael  Twomey 

2 

4io 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Cornells  Ahearn 

2 

411 

Ginn  &  Co. 

R.  J.  Reid 

3 

413 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

Wm.  C.  Russell 

2 

4^3 

44                44 

T.  J.  Harrington 

2 

414 

44                44 

John  J.  Griffin 

2 

415 

44                44 

Richard  R.  Bunkert 

2 

416 

Walworth  Manufacturing  Co. 

James  Barry 

2 

417 

44                       44 

Joseph  T.  Geary 

2 

59 


k 


I 


& 


BOSTON  TelepliooB  No.  1  Tremont 


TRUCKMEN 

6  CHATHAM  ROW 

AND 

113  riMIIKLIN  ST.  BOSTON 


i 


Telephone,  Hayiiiarket  Nos.  491  and  492 

C.  BERRY  &  CO. 

Importers  and  Wholesale  Dealers  in 

Wines  and  Liquors 

Bottlers  of 

LAGER,  ALE  AND  PORTER 

Proprietors  of  Berry's  Diamond  Wedding  Rye  and 
Bourbon  Whiskey 

84  to  88  Leverett  St,  and  2  to  8  Astiland  St. 

BOSTON,     MASS. 

J.  E.  F.  Downes  Quick  Delivery 

D0WNE8  LUMBER  COMPANY 


Successors  to  O'Neil  Lumber  C< 


EASTERN 
WESTER 


'™-      LUMBER 

AND  SOUTHERN   ■— ^w'  I  T  I  I_^  l_  I    1 

Jobbing  Trade  a  Specialty 
OFFICE  YARDS 

482  Harrison  Avenue       476-484  Harrison  Avenue 

Dry  House.    Rear  490   Harrison  Avenue 


Telephones,     ,  Trerr.ont 


BOSTON 


Telephone  1240 


SUMNER'S  MARKET 

31  BROMFIELD    STREET.  BOSTON 

Dealer  in 

PROVISIONS,  FRUITS,  GAME,  ETC. 

OF  ALL  KINDS 

Orders  by  Telephone  promptly  and  faithfully  tilled. 
Orders  taken  at  residence  when  desired 

The  Clioicest  Goods  at  Lowest  Marl;et  Rates 

JOHN  W.  WHITNEY 

Dealer  in 

BARRELS 

9     CHESTNUT     STREET 
SOMERVILLE,    MASS. 

Telephone,    I  579-2   Somerville 


60 


MANUFACTURERS'  DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD  —  Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

NO. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Nc. 

of 

Horses 

418 

Walworth  Manufacturi 

ng 

Co. 

James  Barry    2nd. 

2 

419 

Andrew  Johnson 

2 

430 

Timothy  Ahearn 

2 

421 

Michael  O'Neil 

2 

422 

John  Ahearn 

4 

423 

William  Glancy 

6 

CLASS  26  — FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


424 

Eraschoe  C.  Gleason 

Harvey  J.  Day 

2 

425 

S.  Hirshberg 

Bernard  Deich 

426 

James  R.  Jones 

William  Vliner 

427 

i  i                      u 

Charles  Hudson 

428 

((                     u 

William  Brown 

429 

Thomas  McDowell 

John  Bronkhart 

430 

William  J.  Mcintosh 

Frank  Kane 

431 

The  Lewis  F,  Perry  &  Whitney  Co 

E.  W.  Murray 

432 

((                       u 

" 

W.  A.  Cutting 

433 

u 

u 

William  H.  Mathews 

434 

Seaverns  Piano  Action 

Co. 

Frank  R.  Cushing 

435 

H.  Snyder 

Max  Hilson 

436 

Derby  Desk  Co. 

L.  E.  Smith 

437 

((              (( 

Frank  J.  Sexton 

2 

438 

((              (( 

C.  E.  Farnam 

2 

439 

((          '     (( 

M.  J.  Callahan 

2 

440 

.(<                '       u 

Thomas  J.  Carroll 

4 

61 


F.G.ALLNUTT 

Dealer  in 

1 

NO  OTHER  FOOD  PRODUCT 
HAS  A  LIKE  RECORD 

PROVISIONS 

Bakers  Cocoa 

FISH    AND    OYSTERS 

a         50 

FRUIT  AND  VEGETABLES 

i^\         Highest  Awards 

Agent  for 

KATAHDIN  SPRING  WATER 

^Kjjif^^       Europe  and 
MlSk               America 

III '  '  Mill      '^^^^s  °^  Constantly 

Sl4Lli|M                Increasing 

Registered.                                   SalcS 
U.S.  l-al.  oi 

6  Boylston  St,  Cambridge 

Telephone  Connection 

Walter  Baker  &  Co.,  Ltd. 

[Established  1780] 

DORCHESTER,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Brighton  49-2 

Henry  Blewett 

Daniel  F.  McCormack 

French,  Vienna  T\  I  T/Tl"r>    Pumpernickel 
Cream    and        K  A  K   h.  K       ^>'«  ^''^P 
Graham          UAlVLill     Rolls,    Etc. 

250  WINCHESTER  ST.,  Brookline 

BR?:AD  and  ROLLS  at  Retail 

FOK    SALE    BY 

A.  S.  Spiegel.  141  Eliot  St.,  Boston 

Carl  A.  Weitz,  105  Eliot  St.,  Boston 

H.  Erath,  170  Friend  St.,  Boston 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.,  Brookline 

J 

Practical  Horse  Shoer 

523  COLUMBIA  ROAD 
DORCHESTER 

JOHN  T.CONNOR 

.    S.    NEVVCOMB                                                                              G.    M.    D.    LtGG 

J.  S.  NEWCOMB  &  CO. 

kl6 

Contractor 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal 

AND  POULTRY 

71    Palmer  St.,      Roxbury 

Telephone,  74-9-3  Roxbury 

I 

Jasement,  4  Quincy  Market,     Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone.  Richmond  220 

G2 


CLASS  27  — GROCERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  thej  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

441 

Bain  Bros.  Co. 

H.  A.  Jerauld 

I 

442 

((                        n 

James  N.  Doherty 

I 

443 

a                  a       ■ 

James  A.  Fitzgerald 

2 

444 

Eldridge,  Baker  &  Co. 

William  Stewart 

I 

445 

i(                                    u 

Elmer  E.  Dimond 

2 

446 

((                           l( 

John  S.  McAdams 

2 

447 

J.  A.  Bowman 

George  Farnum 

I 

448 

J.  R.  Dagnino  &  Co. 

Angelo  Serino 

I 

449 

D.  J.  Keefe 

James  E.  Corbett 

I 

450 

New  England  Grocery  Co. 

Jack  Fargione 

I 

451 

Purdy  Bros. 

Warren  B.  Purdy 

1 

452 

Walter  A.  Shedd 

Walter  A.  Shedd 

I 

453 

C.  D.  Swain  &  Co. 

Richard  Riedel 

.      I 

454 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Joseph  Garland 

I 

455 

Owen  Carroll 

I 

456 

C  H.  Jones 

2 

457 

John  Murphy 

2 

458 

L.  Loughman 

2 

459 

Albert  L.  Goodrich 

4 

460 

Daniel  Singleton 

4 

461 

Timothy  Driscoll 

4 

462 

Patrick  Donahue 

6 

463 

Patrick  F.  Carney 

6 

63 


BR®; 

IMC. 


JOHN  H.  SULLIVAN 
General   Contractor 

LAKE  STREET 

Cor.  Commonwealth  Avenue 

Telephone,  147  Brighton 

L  A.  WATERHOUSE 

TRUCKMAN 

155  Federal  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 

TELEPHONE.  MAIN  3421-3 


BAIN  BROTHERS  CO. 

WHOLESALE 
GROCERS 

240  Milk  Street,       Boston 


A.C.& 


mP[|_K|  ^COMPANY 

SIGNS 

OF    EVERV  DESCRIPTION 


BRASS  TEAM   SIGNS 


69  Long  Wharf, 


FOOT  OF  STATE  ST. 

■PHONE  574  MAIN 


64 


CLASS  28  — CONFECTIONERS 

The  Judges  may  award  sucli  ribbons  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

464 

M.  Frediani 

John  I'^rediani 

I 

465 

Hazen  Confectionery  Co. 

Thomas  W.   Tobin 

I 

466 

u                        u 

Frank  J-  Smith 

2 

467 

((                      u 

Robert  R.  Loomer 

2 

468 

F.  L.  Miller  &  Co. 

John  W.  Phipps 

I 

469 

The  Walter  M.  Lowney  Co. 

Thomas  Dunn 

I 

470 

John  Mullen 

I 

471 

John  Keefe 

I 

472 

J.  A.  Green 

I 

473 

Carl  Leightzer 

I 

474' 

Bert  Sarsfeiklt 

I 

475 

(                  ii                           a 

M.  B.  Patten 

2 

476 

S.  Hamilton 

?, 

CLASS  29  -  BAKERS^  SINGLES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


477  Austin  Biscuit  Co. 

478 

479 

480  "  " 

481  Henry  Blewett 

482  '^ 
483 

484 

485  Drake  Bros. 

486 

487 


John  F.  McCarthy 
Burt  L.  Otis 
Joseph  F.  Collins 
Joseph  M.  Meaney 
Winfred  H.  Eldridge 
Dana  Higgins 
Cyrus  Des  Roaches 
Cyrus  C.  Gaudet 
Albert  H.  Robinson 
Chas.  W.  Robinson 
Chas.  A.  McKenna 


65 


BAKERS^ 

SINGLES 

—  Continued. 

Ribbon 

Ko. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

no. 

of 
Horses 

488 

Drake  Bros. 

A.  J.  Jackson 

489 

" 

Frank  J.  Straine 

490 

ii 

Fred  W.  Gardner 

491 

u 

William  Croke 

493 

Young's  Biscuit  Co. 

Henry  McGowan 

CLASS  30 -BAKERS^  DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


493 

George  G.  Fox  Co. 

Louis  E.  Bishop 

2 

494 

((              i(. 

William  H.  Vaughn 

2  • 

495 

Austin  Biscuit  Co. 

Patrick  Gillespie 

2 

496 

a               tt 

Edmund  Driscoll 

4 

CLASS  31— PROVISIONS,  LIGHT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


I 


497 

Lewis  Canali 

W.  L.  Bonardi 

498 

Crosby  Bros.,  Inc. 

Walter  H.  Ordway 

499 

L.  M.  Dyer  &  Co.,  Inc. 

Manuel  Strauss 

500 

Ik                   ifc 

Thomas  H.  Murphy 

501 

W.  D.  Halward 

W.  D.  Halward 

502 

F.  H.  Hosmer  &  Co. 

John  Kielty 

502a 

H.  M.  Lamb 

D.  Finnerty 

503 

Lindonville  Creamery  Assoc. 

Wm.  G.  Utting 

504 

a                                    li 

Michael  J.  Burns 

505 

James  J.  Lynch 

Mathew  D.  Lynch 

S06 

Harry  W.  Murphy 

H.  T.  Leary 

507 

W.  J.  Papouleas 

W.  J.  Papouleas 

508 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

J.  H.  Scales 

509 

.. 

Clarence  Belton 

5'o 

(;                    4( 

G.  F.  Seamon 

511 

James  H.  Woods 

James  H.  Woods 

67 


Telephone  Connection.  Geo.  J.  Kliler,  Proprietor 


R.  J.  ELDER 


r 


116  Mt  Street,  [ast  Boston 

BOSTON  OFFICE 

CORNER  SUiilR  AND  DEVONSHIRE  STREETS 
IVIoving  of  Heavy  Machinery  a  Specialty 


EXPRESS 


Leaves  East  Boston  Mornings.    Returns  at  Noon 
Leaves  East  Boston  2  P.  M.     Returns  at  5  P.  M. 


J.G. 


CORPORATION^ 


CHIMO  III  N,  I  CITY 

DRESSED  BEEF 


36  Nortli  St.  Boston.  Mass. 


Co 


12?  I  flRST  miu 


WHOLESALE    AGENTS    Ft 


STANDARD  WOOD  CO.  of  New  M 

L  M.  DYER  &  CO. 

INCORPORATED 

PROVISIONS 

WHOLESALE  AND   RETAIL 

2, 4, 6  and  8  Faneuil  Hall  Market,  Boston 

Telephone,  1760  Richmond 

F.  W.  Dyer,  Pre.st.  and  Treas.  G.  A.  Hall,  Vice-Prest. 

J.  E.  Hyland,  Asst.  Treas. 


I 


& 


WHOLESALE  OEAIEKS  !N 

Fine   Confectionery 

AND  SALTED  NUTS 

2200  Washioffton  Street,  Roxtiiry 

Telephone  Cumbridge  S5  Business  Established  iSo; 

PROCTOR    BROTHERS 

Wholesale  and  Retail 

Graip,  Hay,  Straw  and  M 

CRAIGIE'S  BRIDGE,  EAST  CAMBFIDGE 
IMPORTERS  OF  PEAT  MOSS 

Geo.  O.  Proctor,  Prop.  E.  R.  Lovell,  Mgr. 


68 


CLASS  32  — PROVISIONS,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  Judges  mav  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserxed. 


"of 
Ribbon 

No. 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

512 

C.  A.  Adams 

W.  S.  Wilson 

I 

513 

Bartlett  Bros.  &  Co. 

J.  J.  Donovan 

I 

5H 

J.  D.  Bean 

J.  M.  Cronin 

I 

515 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

W.  E    Mumford 

I 

516 

U                          il. 

Hiram  Emery 

I 

516a 

u 

Norris  W.  Currier 

I 

517 

E.  W.  Harrington 

R.  E.  Harrington 

2 

518 

L.  Martin 

Thomas  H.  Dicker 

I 

519 

Harry  W.  Murphy 

Fred  DeCourcey 

2 

520 

G.  W.  Reid 

G.  W.  Reid 

I 

521 

((           t( 

R.  R.  Reid 

T 

522 

W.  G.  &  H.  C.  Russell 

F.  J.  Farrenkoph 

I 

523 

Alfred  Sears 

William  H.  Sears 

I 

524 

A.  S.  Spiegel 

A.  S.  Spiegel 

I 

The  Judges 


CLASS  33  — MILK  SINGLES 

DIVISION  A 

lay  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


525 
526 

528 
529 
530 
531 
532 

533 
534 


C.  Brigham  Co. 


Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 


Bert  Robbins 
Thomas  Dixon 
George  W.  Swinimen 
Howard  L.  Philips 
J.  Clough 
Alexander  McClean 
Howard  White 
F.  H.  Collins 
David  Alton 
Richard  Yeaton 


69 


<:M'^ 


J.  W.  McENANY 

(3cneral  lUrucking 


OF  EVERY  KINI^/ 

Implements.       ^^^^ 

TELEPnoNE      Machines.  ^^^^=* 
RICHMOND  1660  Woodeiiware. 

(INCOHPOBATED) 

51  AND  52    NORTH  MARKET  STREET.  BOSTON. 


JTumixIiGS'  ^ijyproi^ed  J^mpJoyeo^. 
Morcantile,  jAi^rJcuItural.  Horficultural. 

TELJiPHOVE   RICH.    1660 


D.  S.  WOODBERRY 

Truckman 

326  Commercial  Street 
BOSTON 


^•^>9g:g.:& 


Compliments  of 

Lindonville  Creamery 
Association 


:§i§S@&:e 


Established   1866 


Boston  Forge  Co. 

HAMMERED  IRON  and  STEEL 

FORCINGS 

Office  and  Works  at 

340  Maverick  Street,  East  Boston 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


>S.    COPEUAND.    SU 


70 


MILK  SINGLES  — Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


5.35 
536 
537 
53S 
539 
540 
541 
542 
543 
544 
545 


Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 


H.  P.  Hood  &  S( 


William  McMahon 
Elmer  E.  Morse 
James  Miller 
Michael  Powers 
C.  G.  Lewis 
B.  F.  Jones 
A.  W.  Carey 
Charles  F.  Scott 
George  H.  Smith 
W,  A.  Noonan 
J.  L.  Chisholm 


DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


546 

George  A.  Lord 

547 

George  H.  Noone 

54S 
549 

Oak  Grove  Farm  Co 

550 

551 

552 

Papkee  Bros. 

553 

Waumesit  Farm 

554 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

555 

i.i                  a 

556 

a                       u 

557 

n                       u 

55« 

li'                     (( 

559 

" 

560 

J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co 

561 

it                    (( 

William  S.  Lewis 
H.  F.  Noone 
T.  J.  Griggin 
H.  G.  Wood 
Gilbert  V.  Smith 
Patrick  J,  McDonottgfh 
Harry  Barry 
H.  C.  West 
William  A.  Greaves 
J.  F.  Driscoll 
William  S.  Murdock 
Ivan  C.  Phelps 
Frank  Hall 
W.  Hamilton 
James  Whitman 
David  O.  Durgin 


Compliments  of 


Uphams  Corner 


Stable    Co. 


ELM  FARM   MILK  COMPANY 


PURE    MILK  AND    CREAM 


Wales  Place, 


Dorchester,  Mass. 


Telephone  2100  Dorchester 

We  make  :i  specialty  of  family  trade.  The  dairies  in  which 
our  milk  is  produced  are  under  the  examination  of  our  own 
inspectors.  The  cows  are  clean,  the  stables  whitewashed  and 
well  lighted,  the  milk  is  promptly  cooled  and  shipped  by  ex- 
press trains  in  refrigerator  cars. 


W.  J.   HIQQINS 

IMPORTERS  AND 
GROCERS 

128  - 134  Emerson  Street 

SOUTH  BOSTON 

AFREECUNICTSb 

is    maintained    daily    from 
2   to  3   o'clock  by   the  new 

Commonwealth  Hospital  for 
ANIMALS 

24 Cummington St.,  Back  Bay  ''!^!:'^n.y 


J.  O.  WETHERBEE  CO. 

LUMBER   DEALERS 

60  to  74  BRIDGE  STREET 

(CRAIGIE  BRIDGE) 
EAST    CAMBRIDGE 


A.  A.  Howe 


Telephone  Main  1767 


A.  H.  Uowe 


A,  A.  ROWE  &  SON 

Forwarding  Agents  and   Trnckmen 

Custom  House  Brokers 
32  INDIA  WHARF,     .BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

GEO,  E,  HOMER 


McGREEVEY  &  CO. 

DEALERS  IN 

COAL  and  WOOD 

77   SMITH  STREET 
ROXBURY 

Telephone   Connection 


CLASS  34  — MILK  DOUBLES 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  thej  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  ^AME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

562 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Roy  Lang 

2 

,S63 

.. 

Robert  Coulter 

2 

564 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Jerry  Henderson 

2 

565 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Suns 

F.  W.  Carnes 

2 

566 

((                   kt 

G.  T.  Lord 

2 

567 

D.  Whiting  &  Son 

John  Shea 

2 

568 

.. 

X.  Trembly 

2 

569 

((                  (( 

C.  E.  Everton 

2 

269a 

ti                      a 

E.  H.  Evtrton 

.   2 

CLASS  35  — EXPRESS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved.  In  addition,  the  Mark  Cross 
Company  offer  a  street  blanket  for  the  best  horse,  age  considered,  owned  by  the  driver.  Mrs.  Thacher 
Loring  otters  a  special  prize  of  five  dollars  for  the  best  horse,  age  considered,  not  owned  by  the  driver, 
the  money  to  go  to  the  ilriver.    The  Judges  may  duplicate  this  prize. 


573 
574 

575 
576 
577 
57^ 
579 
580 
581 
582 
5S3 
5S4 


Edward  A.  Baker 
D.  Corcoran 

Michael  G.  Flaherty 
The  General  Service  Co. 
Ludwig  Hupprich 

William  A.  Keen 

William  Mahoney 
Michael  J.  McLoughlin 


Miller  &  Lakin 
Michael    |.  Mulcahev 


H.  F.  Baker 
M.  Walsh 
R.  J.  Hurley 
Michael  G.  Flaherty 
William  Mack 
Albert  Hupprich 
Fred  Hupprich 
H.  F.  O'Brien 
William  A.  Keen 
Hugh  Rooney 
James  Rea 
M.  J.  McLoughlin 
Harry  E.  Younker 
George  Glavin 
Michael   ].  Mulcahev 


[yuEi  s, 


DEALER    IX 


COAL 


199  iOFORO  8IREEI,  BOSTON 

Opposite  Everett  Street 

CHARLESTOWN  DISTRICT 


Telephone 


CHARLESTOWN   136 


)^    a 


55 


THE  KING  OF  ALL  WHISKIES 

JOHN  MILLER  &  CO. 

SOLE  PROPRIETORS 

PARK  SQUARE,  BOSTON 

MANNING  SEAMANS 

Dealer  in 
STAPLE  AND  FANCY 

GROCERIES 

Flour,  Oats,  Cornmeal,  Hay,  Straw,  and  Drain  Pipe 


HARVARD  SQUARE,  BROOKLIIME 


Derby  Desk 
Company 

FACTORY 

SOMERVILLE,  MASSACHUSETTS 

WAREROOMS 
26-28  FEDERAL  ST.,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

High-Grade 
Office,  Bank  and  Library 

FURNITUR  E 

COMPLIMENTS    OF 

Union  Glass 

Company 

Compliments    of 

J.    H.  RICHARDSON 

Cosmopolitan    Boarding 
and  Baiting  Stable 

Corner   PITTS   and   SO.    MARGIN   STREETS 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

STOCK   FARM,  ANDOVER.  MASS. 


74 


EXPRESS  —  Continued 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


5S5 
5S6 

5SS 
5S9 
590 
591 
592 
593 
594 
595 
596 

597 
598 


Munroe  &  Arnold-Merritt  Ex.  Co. 

Parker's  Dedham  Express 
C.  G.  Parmenter 
Fred  W.  Pavitt 
H.  T.  Rugg 

M.  D.  Savage 
Patrick  M.  Sheehy 
M.  J.  Shuckrowe 
Tarbox  Express  Co. 


Samuel  Goodwin 


F.  H.  Murray 
Charles  A.  Burns 
Fred  Hunter 
F.  F.  Dolaher  ■ 
F.  W.  Pavitt 
H.  T.  Rugg 
Wm.  Warner 
A.  Babineau 
P.  M.  Sheehy 
M.  J.  Shuckrowe 
W.  H.  Madigan 
Frank  H.  Powers 
George  L.  Welch 
Moses  Strauss 


CLASS  36  — BARREL  RACKS 

The  Judges  may  award  such   ribbons  as  they  deem   to   be  deserved.     In   addition,  the  London 
Harness  Company  offers  a  street  blanket  for  the  best  horse,  age  considered. 


599  F,  J.  Anderson 

600  M.  H.  Blute 

601  W.  J.  Carroll 

602  John  W.  Whitney 


F.  J.  Anderson 
M.  H.  Blute 
J.  F.  Crowley 
Wm.  McKenzie 
J.  W.  Whitney 


CLASS   37  — HUCKSTERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as   they  deem  to  be  deserved. 
Forgie's  Sons  offer  a  street  blanket  for  the  best  horse,  age  considered. 


In  addition,  Messrs.  James 


604 
605 
606 
607 
608 
609 


J.  B.  Burns 
W.  G.  Burrows 
J.  T.  Coiley 
Thomas  F.  Ford 
James  H.  Nolan 
Otto  E.  Zaugg 


Charles  Sloan 
W.  G.  Burrows 
J.  T.  Coiley 
T.  F.  Ford 
D.  J.  Nolan 
Henry  Sheehan 

(Won  Special  Prize  in  1907) 


THE  lOBSU  lyK  CO.  Red   Acre  Farm 


WIRE  CLOTHS 
AND  SCREENS 

Elevator  Cars  and  Enclosures. 

Fancy  Wrougfht  Iron  and  Brass  Grill  Work. 
75  to  81   CORNHILL, 

BOSTON. 

J.  E.  JACOBS,  Manager.  Telephone,  57  Hayraarket 

COMPLIMENTS  OF... 


(Incorporated) 

STOW,  MASS.  Station,  South  Acton 

Humane  Home 
for  Abused  and  Injured  Horses 


Old  Favorites  pensioned  for  Life 


Country  rest  for  city  working  Horses 


JOHN   HANCOCK  BUILDING 

116  Devoostiire  and  21  to  29  Federal  Streets 

Allston  Laundry 

H.  G.  PRE8C0TT,  Proprietor 

6    8,  lO  BRAINTREE  STREET 
ALLSTON,  MASS. 


Worn-out   and   aged   horses  rescued   from 
cheap  Sales  Stables  and  Junk  Wagons 


Supported  by  Co7itrlbution^.   P.O.  Box  400,  STOW 

Metropolitan 

Laundry 

WATERTOWN,  MASS. 

H.  H.  SAWYER        -        -        -        -        Proprietor 

Finest  Equipped  Laundry 
in  Existence. 

Work  Called  for  and  Delivered 


MAIDEN  COAL  CO. 

228  PLEASANT  ST. 

Telephones,  494  and  495 


CLASS  38  — DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  huch  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

6io 
6ii 
612 
613 
6.4 
615 
616 
617 
618 
619 
620 
62  [ 
622 
623 
624 
625 
626 
627 
628 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


Case  &  Dodge 

Commonw'lh  Hospital  for  Anima 
Columbian  Insecticide  Co. 
Michael  J.  Coughlin 

John  L.  Duffley 
Estabrook  &  Eaton 
John  Friend 
George  T.  Hoyt 
Lewis  Jesselsohn 
J.  W.  McEnany 

John  E.  Welch 

C.  H.  Nichols  &  Bros. 

Henry  Penn 

Henry  M.  Robinson  &  Co. 

Smith  &  Cohen 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 


0.  W.  Butler 
Is    Harry  Bixby 

E.  J.  Kennedy 
^.  J.  Coughlin 
T'homas  J.  Coughlii 
George  A.  Duffley 
Charles  E.  Rogers 
John  Friend 
C.  H.  Pidgeon 
Henry  McKenzie 
Frank  Watson 
Harry  F.  Boyd 
Patrick  J.  Hennesy 
Albert  E.  Taylor 
T.  E.  O'Connell 
William  J.  Flynn 

1.  Smith 
A.  O'Brien 
James  Crowley 


No. 

of 

Horses 


CLASS   39  — DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


629  Boston  G 
630 

631  " 

632  " 

633 
634 

635 
636 

637 


lobe 


Michael  McKee 
Timothy  J.  O'Connor 
Cornelius  Curtin 
James  O'Brien 
William  Grimes 
Jos.  Cheevers 
John  Daly 
Tim  O'Connor,  Jr. 
Michael  J.  Shea 


77 


McCALL,  the  HARNESS  MAN 

353  RUTHERFORD  AVE. 
Get  our  Prices  See  our  Stock 


Tho>.  (.  Priest 


James  T.  Smith 


I  a 


Custom-Made    Collars,   Wood-Tree, 
Saddles  and  Hand-Made  Harness 

A    SPECIALTY 

ESTABLISHED  1868         Telephone,  384  Charlestown 


PRIEST  &  SMITH 

BOARDING,  BAIT- 
ING, LIVERY  AND 
SALE  STABL  E 

First  class  Horse  Shoe- 
ing, also  Clipping  by 
Electricity 


68  to  74  Nortliampton  Street 

TELEPHONE.  325  ROXBURY 


COMPLIMEIMTS     OF 


Fells  Ice  ConipaDy 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.  D.  CRESSY 


G.  B.  HOWARD  &  CO. 

TEAHSTERS 

AND       FORWARDERS 

Clinton  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 


LOCKE  COAL  CO. 

Maiden  and  Medford 


C.  BUTLER  &  CO. 

TRUCKMEN 

AND 

FORWARDERS 

245  Purchase  St.     Boston 

Telephone,  724  Main 


78 


CLASS  40  — DELIVERIES,  DEPARTMENT  STORES 


Th 

e  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 

No 
of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No. 

of 

Horse 

638 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

James  H.  Padden 

639 

" 

Lewis  H.  Adams 

640 

ki                 a 

W.  E.  Denvir 

641 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

A.  York 

642 

(I                 a 

John  Lockney 

643 

((                     u 

James  Haggerty 

644 

((                 (( 

William  Donahue 

645 

a                  ii. 

James  A.  Regan 

646 

it                  a 

Joseph  Finn 

647 

i(                   (( 

James  Gagan 

648 

((                      u 

William  Lockney 

649 

" 

Thomas  Lonergan 

650 

((                            Li 

Daniel  McDonald 

651 

Henry  Siegel  Co. 

Thomas  Barrett 

652 

t(           (I 

J.  J.  McCarthy 

653 

((                   n 

M.  J.  Burns 

654 

(t               a 

Joseph  W.  McQiiaide 

655 

Li                    Li 

John  F.  Teehon 

6s6 

Ll                     LI 

Ike  Armstrong 

^^57 

LL                     LL 

John  S.  Adams 

658 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thomas  Connely 

659 

((              (I 

Timothy  Connely 

660 

((                                 LL 

James  Stuffle 

661 

LL                           LL 

Thomas  Moynihan 

662 

LL                           LL 

Charles  Meir 

663 

LL 

Alfred  Hoyle 

79 


Compliments  of.  , 

THE 


THE  STETSON  '^'^'^^^'^'^^^■^■^■^■^■^^■^- 
GOAL  COMPANY 

STAR  BREWING 
COMPANY 


WHARF  AND  MAIN  OFFICE: 

496  First  Street 

SOUTH    BOSTON 


I^Jl^ 


JOHN  A.  STETSON, 

President  and  General  Manager 


^t^^.s'^^ 


I 


ROBERT  D.  HALL. 

Treasurer 


Telephone  40I-2  So.  Boston 
M.  J.  SHEA,  Manager 


mmmmmmmm&mmm^.mmm 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


Wilson    Tisdale  Co.   JOHNA.BRADFORD 

COAL  COMPANY 


Old  Colony 
Stable 


WORKING  HORSES  AND  WAGONS 
TO  LET  BY  DAY  OR   WEEK 


46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


Telephone  Connection 

A.  P.  CHADBOURNE 

Truckman  and 
General  Forwarder 

39  and  41   Commercial   Street 
BOSTON 


80 


CLASS  41  —LAUNDRIES 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No. 
Horses 

664 

Allston  Laundry 

Adolph  Poirier 

665 

a                 ii, 

William  Frizzel 

666 

a                 a 

James  J.  Dale 

667 

F.  D.  Gordon 

Joseph  H.  Watts 

668 

Metropolitan  Laundry 

Co. 

H.  C.  Plottner 

669 

Lillian  M.  Bailey 

John  Duncan 

670 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

John  B.  Fay 

671 

Marine  Office  Towel  S 

upply  Co. 

P.  J.  Hennessy 

672 

City  Laundry  Co. 

Solon  J.  Richardson 

673 

((                        u 

W.  M.  Paterson 

674 

ii                        u 

Frank  H.  Ames 

675 

u 

James  P.  O'Brien 

676 

((                   it 

Frank  S.  Wells 

677 

" 

Joseph  Farrell 

67S 

a                   a 

William  W.  Paterson 

679 

u 

Henry  K.  Barnard 

6S0 

" 

Morris  L  Daniels 

681 

a                   a 

Daniel  N.  McLeod 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as 

they  deem  to  be  deserved. 

682 

A.  H.  Kneeland  Laundry  Co. 

A.  H.  Kneeland 

683 

Joseph  A.  Lutz 

A.  Thompson 

684 

John  E.  Morris 

James  F.  Morris 

685 

Standish  Laundry  Co 

William  M.  Nelson 

686 

Daniel  J.  Riley 

Daniel  J.  Riley 

687 

VV.  G.  Seaverns 

John  Passalacque 

688 

U                    l( 

Daniel  MacPhee 

81 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


S.  G.  PARKER  CO. 

87  Albany  Street 


Windsor    Mineral   Spring  Soda  Water,  Saratoga  Spring  Waters 

Company 


g&@ 


&  §-.  §^  §^  §^  §=:  §^  ^  S'.  e-.  e^  e^  S=^ 


W.  H,  NAYLOR 
Painter  and  Decorator 

2a  Ramsey  Street  Upham's  Cottier 

DORCHESTER 

Telephone  Connection 


L  SWETT'S  GENUINE  ROOT  BEER 


IN  FOUNTAINS 


ESTABLISHED    1877 

COAL 

17 
DAVIS  ST. 

MNDUSTRIALJ 

Telephone 
658  Tremont 

WOOD 

OLIVER  C.  ELLIOT,  Supt. 


P.  O'RIORDEN 

GENERAL    CONTRACTOR 

AUTHORIZED    FORAVARDING    AGENT    FOR    THE 

BOSTON  &  MAINE  R.  R.      E.  &  W.  Divs.  30  House,  Rutherford  Ave.  Tel.  Charlestown  20 

FItchburg  Div.  Warren  Bridge.    Tel.  Richmond  155 
MERCHANTS  &  MINERS  TRANS.  CO.,  Philadelphia  Line 

Fiske  Wharf.    Tel.  Richmond  1210 

BOSTON  MERCHANTS  LINE,    Central  Wharf,  Tel.  Main  2556 
U.  S.  CUSTOM  HOUSE,  Tel.  Richmond  800 

LARGEST    FORWARDERS    IN    NEW    ENGLAND 

Main  Office,  6  City  Square,  Charlestown.  Teis.  Charlestown  I30-I3i 


Estimates  cheerfully  furnished 


ESTABLISHED    iSsS 


82 


LAUNDRIES  —  Division  B  —  Continued 


No. 

No. 

of 

of 

ibbon 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


6S9  Taylor  Bros.  Laundry  Co. 

690 

691 

692 

693 
694 

695 
696 
697 
698 


William  J,  Hawkes 
Alfred  Miller 
Elmer  F.  Lewis 
William  T.  Roffey 
J.  A.  Guilmartin 
B.  L.  Gardner 
Samuel  D.  Bibber 
Frank  A.  Roffey 
Charles  F.  Haynes 
John  L.  Davis 


CLASS  42  — GAS  AND  ELECTRIC  LIGHT  COMPANIES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


699 
700 
701 

702 

704- 

706 
707 
708 
709 
710 
711 
712 

713 
714 


Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 


Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co. 


Maiden  Electric  Co. 


Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Light  Co. 


Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 


Robert  Dunbar 
Patrick  L  Macarton 
Michael  Meagher 
Martin  Brennon 
George  A.  Logan 
W.  L.  Almeder 
Fred  Vaughn 
Richard  Powers 
John  W.  Silliker 
Owen  Donahue 
Daniel  Foley 
Dennis  J.  Buckley 
Patrick  Griffin 
Jerry  Buckley 
Daniel  J.  Foley 
William  Chisholm 


83 


KIELTY,  GUILD  &  CO. 


CURB    BROKERS 


Trl.  Main  4301 


2    KlLBY    StKEET 


BENJAMIN  POPE 


E.  W.  COTTLE 


POPE   &   COTTLE 

Lumber  and  Masons'  Supplies 

140  CARTER  STREET     .  .     CHELSEA 
Branch  Yard,  Pearl  and  Marginal    Streets 


TELEPHONE  62 


GEO.  F.  COBH,  Manager 


PAPOULEAS 


FINE 


Confectionery 
and  Tee  Cream 

HARVARD  SQUARE 

BROOKLINE,  MASS. 


Monarch  Visible  Typewriter 


The   MONARCH  TYPEWRITER  COMPANY 

(OLD    SOUTH    BUILDING) 

12   MILK  ST.,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

84 


LIST     OF    ADVEIRXISEIRS 


Allnutt,  F.  G 

AHston  Laundry  Co. 
Atwood  &  McManus 
Austin  Biscuit  Co  .  •  • 


62 

76 

40 

36 

Bain  Bros.  Co 64 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.  (limited) 62 

Bay  btate  Fuel  Co 44 

Berry,  C.  &  Co 60 

Blewett,  Henry 62 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co 60 

Boston  Badge  Co  4- 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co 68 

Uoston  Flag  Pole  Co 5^' 

Boston  Forge  Co 7° 

Boston  Industrial  Home.  (Inc.) S2 

Boston  Molasses  Co 52 

Boston  Rubber  Shoe  Co 58 

Bradford,  John  A.J.  Co 80 

Breck,  Joseph  &  Sons  (corp.) 70 

Brigham,  C.  &  Co 5- 

Butler,  C.  &  Co 7« 

Capillo,  C.  &  Co 46 

Carter's  Ink  Co 40 

Chadbourne,  A.  P 80 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co 44 

City  Laundry 24 

Commonwealth  Hospital  for  Animals -72 

Connor,  John  T 62 

Cronon  &  Foss 60 

Derby  Desk  Co 74 

Doherty,  M.  &  Co 56 

Dorchester  Ice  Co 50 

Downes  Lumber  Co 60 

Drake  Bros    Co 36 

Dyer,  L.  M.  &  Co 68 

Elder,  R.J 68 

Eldridge,  Baker  .S:  Co 5« 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co 72 

Felkin,  A.  C  ct  M.  L.  Co 64 

Fells  Ice  Co 78 

Ferguson.  J.  G.  &  B.   S 44 

Forgie's,  James  Sons 42 

Fox,  George  G.  Co 38 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 68 

Freem.an  &  Smith 28 


Gahm,  Joseph  &  Co. 
Ginn  &  Co 


48 

48 

Harris,  E.   S 5^J 

Hazen  Confectionery  Co 34 

Higgins,  W.   J 72 

Homer,  George  E 72 

Hood,  H.  P.  &  Sons 42 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co 78 

Hovey,  C.  F.  .^  Co 26 

Jordan  Marsh  Company 32 

Kennett,   R.  A S^ 

Kielty.  Guild  &  Co 84 

Lindonville  Creamery  Association 70 

Locke  Coal  Co 78 

London  Harness  Co 76 

Lowney,  Walter  M.  Co 34 

Maiden  Coal  Co 76 


Maiden   Electric  Co.  and  Maiden    and 

Melrose  Gas  Light  Company so 

McCall,  F.  H 78 

McCormack,  Daniel  F 62 

McEnany,  J.  W 70 

McGreevey  &  Co. 72 

McKenney  &i  Waterbury  Co 56 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co 20 

Metropolitan  Laundry  Co 76 

Miller,  John  &  Co 74 

Monarch  Typewriter  Co 84 

Morgan  &  Bond 50 

Mor.se,  Eugene  S 74 

Morss  cV  Whyte  Co 76 

Naylor,  William   H 82 

Newcomb,  J.  S.  &  Co  62 

Oak  Grove  Farm  Co 56 

O'Riorden,  P 82 

Papouleas 84 

Parker,  S.  G.  Co 82 

Perry,  Lewis  F.  &  Whitney  Co 22 

Pierce,  S.  S.  Co. 18 

Pope  &  Cottle 84 

Porter's   Market 5» 

Priest  &  Smith 78 

Proctor  Bros 68 

Pureoxia  Company,  The 52 

Red  Acre  Farm,  Inc    76 

Richardson,  J.  H 74 

Robinson,  W.  M 58 

Roessle  Brewery,  The 32 

Rowe,  A.  A.  &  Sons 72 

Schwalm,  John 46 

Seamans,  Manning 74 

Sears,  Alfred  &  Co 40 

Shattuck  &  Jones 54 

Siegel,  Henry  Company 30 

Snow,  Wheeler,  McElveen  &  Cavanagh 

Horse  Company 46 

Star  Brewing  Co 80 

Stetson  Coal  Co. ,  The   80 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co 58 

Sullivan,  John  H 64 

Sumner's  Market 60 

Talbot,  J.  C 50 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry,  Inc. 64 

Tighe.J.  T.  Co 50 

Tufts,  iSIathan  &  Sons 50 

Union  Glass  Co 74 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 58 

United  Basket  Co 30 

Upham's  Corner  Stable  Co 72 

Walker,  J.  G.  &  Son 68 

Waterhouse,  L.  A 64 

Wetherbee,  J.  O.  Co 72 

Whipple  cV  Co  ,  Inc 26 

White,  R.  H.  Co 38 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons    54 

Whitnev,  John  W. 60 

Whitteniore,  W.    P 48 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co 80 

Windsor  Mineral  Spring  Co 82 

Woodberrv,  D.  S 70 

Woods,  John  M.  &  Co 38 


85 


MEN  AND  HORSES. 

One  fact  has  often  forced  itself  upon  the  attention  of  the  Directors, 
namely,  that  the  welfare  of  the  work-horse  is  bound  up  with  the  welfare  of 
the  men  who  drive  and  care  for  him.  In  stables  where  the  men  are  well 
paid  and  are  treated  with  kindness  and  consideration  by  the  proprietors, 
the  horses,  in  turn,  are  well  treated  by  the  men,  and  look  slick  and  con- 
tented. On  the  other  hand,  in  stables  where  there  is  a  bad  feeling,  or 
utter  want  of  good  feeling,  between  the  employer  and  his  men,  the  horses 
suffer  accordingl}'.  Recognizing  these  facts,  some  public-spirited  women 
in  New  York  and  also  in  Chicago  have  recently  organized  clubs  for 
teamsters,  and  even  clubs  for  teamsters'  wives.  This  a  step  in  the  right 
direction. 

Bad  teamsters  seem  to  gravitate  naturally  to  employers  who  do  not 
really  care  about  their  horses.  If  the  owner  is  a  humane  man,  the  spirit 
of  humanity  will  pervade  his  whole  business.  If  he  is  cruel,  or  simply 
indifferent,  a  spirit  of  brutality,  or  at  least  of  selfish  indifference,  will 
run  through  his  force. 

The  highly  developed  nervous  system  of  the  horse  renders  him 
pecularly  capable  of  suffering.  Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops  far  short  of 
absolute  brutality,  keeps  him  in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation. 
An3'one  who  is  accustomed  to  observe  horses  can  tell  by  a  single  glance 
at  a  given  horse  whether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad  or  indifferent  one. 
The  expression  of  the  animal's  eye,  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears,  tell 
the  story  unmistakably. 

There  are  many  teamsters  who  treat  the  horse  as  if  he  were  a 
machine,  and  therefore  are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty  toward  him,  which 
reacts  on  their  own  characters.  Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their 
lives,  and  their  daily  labor  becomes  a  degradation  and  a  curse  to  them. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many  humane  drivers,  who  have  a  real 
affection  for  their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in  their  appearance. 
These  men  make  good  husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens;  and  their 
daily  labor  is  not  only  a  means  of  a  livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of 
happiness.  To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is  the  main  object  of  the 
Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association. 


86 


^l/Vi^ 


BOSTON 

WORK-HORSE  PARAD^ 

ASSOCIATION 


1909 

CyUh 


CATALOGUE 

Boston   Work -Horse 
Parade  Association 


(INCORPORATED) 


SEVENTH  ANNUAL  PARADE 

MAY  31st,   1909 


ANCHOR    LINOTYPE  PRINTING   CO..    41    INDIA    ST..    BOSTON 


Board  of  Directors 


HIiXRV  C.  MERWIN,  President, 
State  House,  Room  356 

ARTHL'R   PERRIN,  Vice-President, 
Eisher  Avenue,  Brookline 

FRANCIS  PEABODY,  Jr.,  Vice-President, 
Devonshire  Building 

LEWIS  A.  AR^IISTEAD,  Secretary. 
101  Milk  Street 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d,  Treasurer, 
City  Hall 

CHARLES  L.  BURRILL,  State  House,  Room  124. 

CxEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON,  49   Hereford  Street. 

J(^HN  H.  JEWETT,  Boston  Herald. 

AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.R.C.V.S..  State  House.  Room  138. 

W.  1).  OL'nir.V.  70  Portland  Street. 

15ENJ.  W.  WELLS,  50  Congress  Street. 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION. 


HE  first  ^^^~)rk-Horse  Parade  in  Boston,  and  the  fi"st  in  this  coun- 
tr}-,  was  held  (m  Memorial  Day,  1903,  under  the  management 
^^  ^of  ten  or  tweh'e  men  who  had  been  drawn  together  by  their 
interest  in  horses.  Soon  afterward  they  were  incorporated  un- 
der the  name  of  "The  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  x\ssociation,"  and  it  is 
hoped  that  humane  persons  who  have  wills  to  make  and  property  to  leave 
will  bear  that  title  in  mind.  The  Association  has  received  a  verv  inadequate 
support  from  the  rich  horse-owners  and  horse-users  in  the  community;  and 
were  it  not  for  the  great  generosity  of  a  few  men  and  women,  among  whom 
are  the  widow  and  relatives  of  the  late  R.  A.  Lawrence,  the  founder  and  first 
President  of  the  Association,  it  is  doubtful  if  the  Annual  Parade  could  be 
maintained. 

There  is  one  change  this  year  in  the  list  of  Directors.  The  Association 
has  lost  by  death,  Randolph  K.  Clarke,  a  Vice-President,  who  had  been  con- 
nected with  the  Parade  from  the  beg'inning.  and  to  whose  tact,  diplomacv  and 
keen  common  sense,  the  directors  are  indebted  for  guiding  them  through 
some  difficult  places.  Mr.  Clarke  was  a  very  amiable,  warm-hearted,  genial, 
courageous  man,  with  a  genuine  love  of  horses,  and  his  death  has  left  a  gap 
in  the  Association  which  will  never  quite  be  filled. 

Francis  Peabody,  Jr.,  who  has  been  a  Director  for  some  years,  and  upon 
whose  judgment  the  Association   greatly  relies,   was  elected    Vice-President   in 


Mr.  Clarke's  place;  and  the  Association  gladly  took  advantage  of  ]\Ir.  Charles 
L.  Burrill's  return  to  lioston  to  re-elect  him  as  a  Director. 

THE    USES    OF    THE    ASSOCIATION. 

Beside  holding-  the  Annual  Parade,  the  Association  has  maintained  dur- 
ing the  past  winter  the  following  means  for  improving  the  condition  and 
treatment  of  work-horses:  a  Course  of  h'ree  Lectures:  a  system  of  Stable  In- 
spection; and  to  some  extent,  a  Permanent  Agent.  These  will  l)e  considered 
separately. 

FREE  LECTURES. 

The  lectures  were  delivered  at  the  Revere  House  "u  Fri(la\-  e\enings 
as  follows : 

MR.  A.  P.  ROOT.  "Shoeing." 

MR.  W.  D.  QUniPY,  "Humane  Harnessing" 

MR    THOMAS  LAXGLAN,  "Experiences  of  a  Humane  Agent." 

THE  TTOX.  GEO.  G.  CROCKER.  "Rules  of  the  Road  and  DHving." 

DR.  D.  P.  POLGER,  "Diseases  of  the  Feet." 

DR.  FRANK  J.  SCLLIVAX,  "Feeding  and  Watering." 

^IR.  C.  .\.  CAAH'PELL,  "Handling  and  Treatment  of  PP.rses." 

The  .Association  hereby  express  its  thanks  to  these  gentlemen  for  the 
interesting  lectures  which  they  delivered,  and  which  wer-j  listened  to  bv  ex- 
tremely attentive  audiences.  Next  year  it  is  proposed  to  have  this  course 
delivered  in  a  hall,  to  permit  smoking,  anck  so  far  as  may  be  possible,  to  il- 
lustrate the  lectures  by  the  use  of  a  stereopticon. 

THE   STABLE    INSPECTION. 

The  system  of  Stable  Pispection,  the  Directors  believe,  is  capable  of  re- 
sulting in  great  benefit  to  horses  and  economy  to  owners.  The  stables  en- 
tered are  inspected  from  time  to  time  b}-  couii^etcnt  men  whose  reports  and 
suggestions  are  communicated  confidcntiallv  to  the  owners,  .\fanv  large 
concerns,  especially  corporations,  lea\-e  their  stable  maiiagement  wliolly  to 
subordinates,  and  often  do  not  know  whether  it  is  good  or  Ixid,  or  how  it 
could  be  improved.     No  amount   of  "system"  can   compensate  for  the  want 


of  personal  interest  in  the  horses  and  in  the  men  who  take  care  of  them.  It 
shotild  be  the  lousiness  of  some  person  in  authority,  in  every  coneern,  to  know 
how  the  horses  I'^ok  and  feel,  whether  the  men  in  charge  are  faithful  or  not, 
how  long-  the}-  have  l)een  in  the  serxice.  what  sngoestions  they  have  to  make 
and  so  forth.  It  seems  to  be  the  policy  of  many  large  corporations  and  firms 
to  treat  men  and  horses  alike  as  if  they  w^ere  machines.  This  is  not  good 
"business"  to  say  nothing  of  humanity. 

The  Inspection  is  o])eii  to  stables  of  all  kinds,  including  livery,  hack  and 
boarding  stables;  and  the  staldes  are  judged,  not  in  competition  v\Aith  one 
another,  but  accordingly  as  they  satisfy  the  standard  fixe<l  by  the  judges. 

Among  the  points  considered  are  quality  and  c|uantity  of  hay  and  grain, 
\vatering,  bedding,  blai-iketing,  grooming,  ^•enti]ation,  stalls,  sanitary  condi- 
tion of  stable,  and  last.  Init  not  least,  the  handling  of  the  horses  by  drivers 
and  grooms,  including  tlie  condition  in  which  the  horses  are  returned  to  the 
stable  by  the  dri\-ers.  There  were  thirty  entries  this  year,  and  the  names  of 
the  stables  and  stable  foremen  winning  prizes  are  stated  below.  The  stables 
and  the  foremen  are  not  always  graded  alike.  Sometimes,  a  foreman  makes 
poor  use  of  the  facilities  at  his  command,  and  in  other  cases  a  good  foreman 
has  to  struggle  against  bad  drivers,  poor  facilities,  or  a  stingy  owner 

The  following  matters  especially  have  been  forced  upon  the  attention 
of  the  Judges: 

1.  That  if  the  men  are  on  good  terms  with  the  employer,  the  horses 
are  usually  well  treated  ;  whereas,  if  the  men  are  dissatisfied,  the  horses  are 
ahva}-s  l)adly  treated. 

2.  That  the  worst  eneni}-  of  the  horse  is  intoxicating  li(|uor  in  the 
driver  or  sta1:)leman 

3.  That  in  many  stables,  es])ecially  trucking  stables,  there  is  an  insuffi- 
cient force  on  Sundays,  so  that  the  houses  are  not  properly  cleaned,  bedded 
or  watered. 

4.  That  in  many  stables,  otherwise  excellent,  the  horses  are  not 
watered  at  night  after  eating  their  hay,  when  they  are  always  thirsty. 

5.  That  in  the  case  of  man}-  large  concerns  the  stable  treatment  is 
almost  perfect,  but  the  drivers  hurry  the  horses  when  they  start  out  in  the 
morning,  or  after  the  noon  feed,  and  also  hurry  them  to  the  stable  at  night, 
bringing  them  in  hot.  Th's  is  especially  true  of  the  lighter  horses,  such  as 
those  used  by  bakers,  milk  dealers  and  department  stores. 


The  Judges  for  the  Stable  Inspection,  to  whom   the  Association  is  in- 
debted for  very  careful  and  conscientious  work,  were  the  following: 

DR.  HOWARD  M.  BUCK  MR.  THOMAS  N.  DUNICAN 
MR.  GEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON  MR.  R.  A.  KENNETT 
MR.  JOSEPH   r..  MATTHEWS  DR.  J.  H.  ROLLIN 


FOR     THE     LIST      OF      PRIZE      WIXXERS 
IN    THE    STABLE    INSPECTION,    SEE    THE 
PAGES  AT  THE  END  OF  THE  CATALOGUE. 


FIRE  DEPARTMENT  STABLES. 

There  was  a  special  class  for  Fire  Department  stal)les  in  which  the  en- 
tries were  as  follows:  the  cities  of  Cambridge,  Somervillo,  Medford,  Melrose, 
Chelsea  and  Everett,  and  the  town  of  Brookline.  In  this  class  the  entries 
were  judged  in  competition,  one  city  against  another,  a'ul  the  prizes  w^ere 
awarded  as  follows : 

FIRST  PRIZE— Everett. 

SECOND  PRIZE— Somerville,  Chelsea,  Cambridge,  Brookline. 

THIRD  PRIZE— Melrose. 

The  Judges  in  the  Fire  Department  Stable  Competition  were: 
JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d. 
BENJ.  W.  WELLS. 

A  PERMANENT  AGENT. 

(^)wing  to  the  generosity  of  Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer,  the  Association  has  been 
able  to  employ  on  Sundays  a  special  agent  to  examine  the  stables  of  work- 
horses in  Boston  and  in  the  vicinity,  especially  stables  in  which  there  is  rea- 
son to  believe  that  the  horses  will  be  poorly  cared  for.  Sunday  is  the  day 
on  which  this  work  can  best  be  done,  for  it  is  the  only  day  in  wdiich  the  horses 
are  all  in  the  stable.  The  Association  has  employed  for  this  purpose  Mr.  J. 
W.  GahvaA-  and  'Sir.  D.  J.  Donovan,  both  of  whom  have  rendered  very  con- 
scientious and  efficient  service.  Many  cases  of  horses  unfit  for  w'ork  have 
been  reported  by  our  agents  to  the  ^I.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  and  that  society  has  ahvays 
acted  promptly  in  the  matter.  In  other  cases,  the  owners  of  horses  have 
been  advised  and  w^arned,  and  in  many  instances  the  treatment  of  their  horses 
has  been  improved  in  consequence. 

The  Association  is  extremely  anxious  to  employ  a  permanent  agent  for 
this  kind  of  work,  whose  services  could  be  had  throughout  the  week  and 
throughout  the  year,  but  it  has  no  funds  for  the  purpose.  There  is  an  im- 
mense opportunity  for  constructive  work  of  this  kind,  and,  so  far  as  is  known, 
no  society  or  association  is  engaged  in  it. 

THE   DISPOSAL   OF   OLD    HORSES. 

There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  communitv  that  old  and  worn-out 
horses  or  painfully  lame  horses  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or 


otherwise  disposed  of  in  a  humane  manner.  The  recent  pensioning  by  the 
United  States  o-overnnicnt  of  a  horse  that  had  been  in  its  ser\-ice  for  twenty 
years  was  noticed  in  the  newspapers  generally,  and  the  action  of  the  gov- 
ernment was  inxariablv  praised.  It  seems  almost  impossible  that  a  person, 
firm  or  corjxiration  should  use  a  horse  for  ten,  fifteen  or  even  twenty  years, 
and  then  wdien  he  is  old  and  worn-out,  sell  him  for  a  small  price  to  the  first 
pedlar  or  other  purchaser  who  comes  along;  and  yet  this  is  frequently  done.  It 
is  often  said  that  a  horse  too  old  or  too  unsound  for  city  work  might  be  or 
should  be  sent  t(^  a  farm  in  the  country,  but  a  farm  is  usually  about  the  worst 
place  that  could  be  selected  for  a  horse  used  to  the  good  feeding  and  comforts 
of  a  city  stable.  Horses  on  farms,  as  a  rule,  receive  less  grain  and  less  care 
and  are  more  exposed  to  cold  than  any  other  horses  in  the  world. 

In  New  York  a  law  was  passed  two  years  ago  authorizing  the  jiension- 
ing  of  fire  department  horses,  and  the  following  law  was  passed  la>l  }ear  by 
the  Mas'^achusetts  Legislature: 

[Chap.   133.] 

AN     ACT     RELATIVE    TO     THE"  DISPOSITIOX     OF     CERTAIN 

HORSES  OWNED  BY  CITIES  AND  TOWNS. 

Be'  if  enacted,  etc..  as  follozvs: 

Section  t.  Whenever  any  horses  used  in  the  fire  department,  tlic  p'dice 
department,  the  street  or  sanitary  department,  or  any  other  dei)artment  of 
any  citv  or  town  shall,  bv  rea'^on  of  disability  or  disease,  become  unfit  for  use 
till  -ein.  the  commissioner  or  other  officer  having  charge  of  sucli  depart- 
ment, in  cities  with  the  appro\-al  of  the  mayor,  and  in  t()wns  with  the  approval 
of  tlie  selectmen,  instead  of  causing  such  horses  to  be  sold,  may  trau'^fer- 
them  to  the  custody  of  the  charitable  society  incorporated  tmdcr  the  name 
of  Red  Acre  h^arm.  Incorporated,  or  to  any  other  charitable  socict\-  incor- 
porated in  this  commonwealth  for  the  prevention  of  cruelty  to  animals,  or 
for  the  care  and  ]irotection  of  dumb  animals,  if  the  society  is  willing  to 
accejjt  the  custody-  thereof,  to  be  disposed  of  in  such  manner  as  the  saiil 
society  mav  deem  best;  prorided,  that  the  society  upon  receix'ing  an\-  sucli 
horse  shall  give  a  written  agreeiuent  not  to  sell  the  horse  or  to  let  the  same 
for  hire.  If  any  horse  so  received  shall  thereafter  be  sold  or  let  for  hire. 
the  proceeds  of  such  sale  or  letting  shall  be  the  propert)-  of  the  city  nr  town. 
and  custody  of  the  horst'  >hall  revert  to  the  citv  or  town. 


SEVENTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1909 


NY  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  hime,  thin,  galled,  or 
out  of  condition  will  be  disqualified. 

Every  entry  not  disqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon, 
either  first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow). 
In  the  Old  Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons 
are  awarded,  which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in 
other  classes. 

Each    blue   ribbon   winner   will    receive   a   brass 
medal  to  be  worn  as  a  permanent  ornament  on  the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be  award- 
ed. The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved,  sub- 
ject to  the  following  rules: 

( 1 )  Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green  horses, 
and,  if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any  horse, 
unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type  and 
good  quality."" 


MANNERS. 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as   showing  whether  or  not  the  horse 
has  been  treated  kindly. 

COLOR. 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 


*For  what   is    meant  by  quality,   see    the  r«g<?s  at  the   end  of  the  catalogue. 

11 


THE  VEHICLE. 

The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry,  or  reduce  the 
grade  (if  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 


THE   HARNESS. 

The  value  or  beauty  nf  the  harness  does  not  count;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  loo  heavy,  especially  in  ilie  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especiallv  in  the 
collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by  rea- 
son of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in  the 
harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  and  inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of 
pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of  it. 
is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in  re- 
spect to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required. 
Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments 
should  not  be  used. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association  and  shown  in  a  photo- 
graph printed  in  this  catalogue  weighs  only  58  pounds,  collar  and  all,  and 
it  is  big  cnotigh  for  any  1350-pound  horse.  Horses  of  that  weight  frequently 
carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The  bridle  shown  in  the  photograph 
weighs  less  than  two  pounds — about  half  the  usual  weight. 


DRIVERS'    BADGES. 

This  year  the  certificates  formerly  awarded  to  drivers  in  certain  cases 
will  be  discontinued,  and  instead  a  handsome  medal  or  badge,  to  be. worn  on 
the  person,  will  be  given  to  every  driver  wdio  shows  -in  the  parade,  in  good 
condition  and  serviceably  sound,  the  same  horse  or  horses  shown  bv  him  in 
the  parade  of  the  year  before.  (In  the  case  of  foin--horse  teams,  ii  will  be 
sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  were  shown  by  him  the  previous  year.^) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  driver,  all  things  consid- 
ered ;   and    silver   badges    will    be    given    to   the    ten    who    rank    next. 

12 


A  horse  will  be  considered  serviceably  sound  if  he  goes  sound  and 
breathes  sound.     A  blind  horse  may  be  serviceably  sound. 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  he  ambitious  to  ob- 
tain one  of  these  badges,  and  that  ])ossession  of  the  badge  will  be  the  best 
recommendation  that  a  driver  could  have. 

SPECIAL   PRIZES. 

Tn  niemorv  of  R.  A.  Lawrence,  its  first  President,  the  Association  offers 
a  gold  medal,  with  five  di'llars  to  the  driver,  for  the  best  four-horse  team 
in  the  parade,  excluding  winners  of  the  prize  in  previous  years. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums  of 
money,  are  offered  in  the  A'eteran  Driver.  Old  Horse  and  other  classes  by 
the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  PrcA-ention  of  Cruelt}^  to  Ani- 
mals, American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Rescue  League,  Red 
Acre  Farm.  >.liss  Julia  LI.  W'orthington.  Mrs.  Thacher  Lo-ing.  ^Irs.  .\manda 
Dwight.  (lerirge  W.  ILarringtun.  Lewis  A.  Armistead.  James  Forgies'  Sons.  The 
Mark  Cross  Company.  The  London  Harness  Companw  and  others.  These  will 
be  found  s])ecifie(l  in  the  ent-y  list  below 

DRIVING    COMPETITION. 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four  and  six-in-hand  teams  will  be  held  in 
or  near  Commonwealth  Avenue,  while  the  judging  is  taking  place.  Entries 
for  this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first  prize  will  be  a 
silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 

U.    S.    LETTER   CARRIERS. 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  wdio  have 
horses;  of  these  there  are  al)Out  thirty-five. 

By  the  aid  of  the  Hf">n.  AA'.  ]\L  Crane,  the  Association  has  been  al)le  to 
obtain  for  these  men  an  increase  of  $25  in  their  yearly  allowance,  which  is 
now  only  vS325.  This  sum  is  grossl}-  inadequate.  The  men  do  their  best, 
but  their  horses  and  wagons  make  a  poor  showing.  Only  one  has  made  an 
entry  in  the  Parade  of  1900. 

v.] 


NOTICE   TO    SPECTATORS. 

In  nianv  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visil)le  to  .^iiectators  at  the  re- 
viewing stand,  very  pro])erIy  prohibit  the  giving-  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon  of 
high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing  stand  at  a 
walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  l)e  disclosed,  whereas  the 
Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown  to  them  at  a  trot. 
Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under  the  harness,  and  other 
imperfections,  not  always  ai)parent.  frequently  exclude  a  tine  horse,  or  team 
of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be  remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Ex- 
hibition age  counts  in  fav^r  <>f  a  h<irse,  and  green  horses  are  discriminated 
against. 

THE    JUDGES. 

If  the  principles  upon  which  the  prizes  are  awarded  be  kept  in  mind, 
the  Association  believes  that  there  will  be  verv  little  dissatisfaction  with  the 
decisions  of  the  Judges.  Increasing  care  has  been  taken  each  year  in  the 
selection  of  them,  and  the  Association  is  confident  that  its  Judges  now  form 
a  band  of  men  as  competent  and  impartial  as  c<:)uld  be  secured.  Their  ardu- 
ous and  difficult  services  are  rendered  without  compensation,  although  many 
of  them  come  from  distant  points,  and  the  Association  hereby  expresses  its 
gratitude  for  their  orenerous  assistance. 


14 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE. 


lh( 


Horses    walked    on    starting    out    in 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and  at 
night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or  if 
the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar  and  saddle. 

Horses  well  l:)rushed  if  dry. 

Fee_  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only,  horses 
wiped  all  over  v/ith  a  wet  sponge  on  coming 
in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing  the  horse, 
much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Hortes  given  a  little  water,  but  not  much, 
on  comin?-  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 
Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.       (In  any  case 
watered    at    night,    after    eating    their    hay. 
This   is   especially    necessary   in   summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and   grain   of   the   best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday 
noon;    cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter. 

Horses  salted  in  the  bran  mash,  or  other- 
wise, with  regularity. 

Hayloft    kept    clean. 

Harness,  especially   collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie  with 
heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air.  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or  grated 
in    the   upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned   Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Slable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man.  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up    to   the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  v/ith  a  bathtub,  for 
(.he  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all — Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  stiuck.  nor  yelled  at.  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morning, 
and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing  hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  cleaning, 
or  sponging. 

Horses'   legs    washed. 

Hor.'^es  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no  mat- 
(er  how  hot;    or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating  their 
hay.  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night,  and 
horses   watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given — too  much  trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody  hap- 
pens to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean;  sweat  allowed  to  ac- 
cumulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up  dirty. 

Stable  close — no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Si:alls  boarded  up  high,  where  the  horses' 
heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  evening 
and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken;  doors  leflt  open;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge: 
no   bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about;  general  atmosphere  of  noise 
and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out  or 
put  up.  nor  on  Sundays. 


CHIEF    MARSHAL 

FRAXCIS  i'EAlUj])^'.   |R, 


AIDS 


Arthur  Pcrrin 
Joshua  Atwood,  ord. 
Austin  Peters.  M.  R. 
John  H.  Jewett 
William  D.  Ouinil)y 
Charles  L.  Purril! 
Harry  W.  Soule 
Albert  B.  Lewis 
Arthur  Blake 
Tames  I.  [Ir-ioks 


C.  A' 


J'lliii  \\  Waters 
Anluir  Gi.lljert  .Mcrwin 
William  A\".  W'atkin 
Xorton  Wi-o-les worth. 
Roger  D.  Swaim 
H.  A.  Knowles 
Richard  Hale 
Robert  Abthor]) 
11}  am   Whitnt}- 
l..hn    1"..   E.   Wheeler 


VETERINARY    INSPECTOR 

DR.  FRANK  j.  Sl'LLIVAN 


Robert  J.  Taylor 


USHERS 

A.  L.  Ben 


H.   A.   Bossardt 


ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG.  DR.  J.  M. 

BAICER.   GEO.  M. 
BAKER,   JAMES  E. 
BARNES.  DR.   W.    E. 
BLACKWOOD,   DR.    THOS. 
BLAMPIED,  SAMUEL 
BOLGER,   DR.   D.   L. 
BOSWORTH,   C.   W. 
BOWLEY,    L.    E. 
BRAY.   W.    C. 
BRIGHAM,  W.  E. 
BUNKER,   DR.    MADISON 
BUTLER,  WIM.  L. 

CARTER,  R.  D. 
CHADBOURNE.  A.  P. 
COLDWELL.   ELIAS  F. 
CRAMPTON.  G.  A. 

DELANO.   DR.   C.  W. 
DONOVAN.  D.   J. 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 
DUMMER.   R.    G. 
DUNCAN.    .JOHN 
DUNICAN.    T.    N. 

ELDREDGE.   F.    S. 

FARRAR,  JOHN  F. 
FELLOWS,  ALBERT 
FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 
FOGG,  G.  M. 


JUDGES 

GALLUP,    H.   P. 
GILLIGAN.  JAMES   T. 
GORDON.    JOHN 

HANLEY.    DR.    J.    P. 
HARDING     R.    W. 
HARRINGTON.    GEO.    W. 
HAVEN.   HIRAM  A, 
HILL.   DR.   A.   G. 
HOFFMAN.  E.   H. 
HOLDEN,    C.    B. 

JOHNSON.   A.  R. 

KENNETT.    R.    A. 
KENNEY.   J.   R. 

LANGLAN.    THOMAS 
LIBBY,   WYMAN 
LORD,  W,   H. 

MACK,  THOS.  W. 
MANLEY.  LOWELL 
MASON,   T. 
MATTHEWS.   J.   B. 
MAX\ATRLL.   J.   P. 
MAY.  DR.   A.   W. 

Mclaughlin,  e,  c. 

MoMANUS.  H.  p. 
MERRILL,    S.    D. 

.\H'";rM''in,  A.  g. 

MURRAY.   R.    H. 


PARKER.  AUGUSTIN  H. 
pepper.   CHAS.  H. 
PETERS,   H.   M 
PETTIGREW,   J.  A. 
PIERCE,    DR.   B.    D. 


ROBINSON,    A.    G. 
ROBINSON,   J.   E. 
ROLLINS.  DR.   J.  H. 
RUGG.   JULIUS  E. 
RYDER.  W.  H. 


SAAVYER.    CHAS.  W. 
SHEA.   J.    B. 
SHEEHAN.   DR.    T.   S. 
S:\riTH.    LEWIS 
.'-lOI'TTTER,    DR.    H.    A. 
STUART.    GEO.    E. 
STTLLIVAN.  J.  H. 
SWENDEMAN,   JOSEPH 

TIGHE.   T.   F. 
TUTTLE.    J.    M. 
TROW.    JOHN 


WADSWORTH,  DR.   S.   F. 
WALES,    S.   WALTER 
WELCH.   THOMAS  F. 
WHEELER.  L.  E. 
WHITE.   DR.  A.   F. 
WRIGHT.  HARRY   E. 


16 


CONTRIBUTORS 

1909 


Mr.  R.  L.  Agassiz 

iMiss  Mary  H.  Ames 

American  Humane  Education  Society 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Batchelder  Brothers 

Mr.  Walter  C.  Baylies 

Miss  Emily  E.  Beebe 

j\Ir.  E.  Pierson  Beebe 

Mrs.  J.  Arthur  Beebe 

Mrs.  Arthur  W.  Blake 

Miss  Marion  L.  Blake 

Miss  Annie  Bossert 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

Mr.  Peter  C.  Brooks 

Mrs.  Elizabeth  B.  Bryant 

Mrs.  A.  T.  Cabot 

Mr.  C.  A.  Campbell 

Mr.  Eugene  H.  Clapp 

"Chestnut  Hill" 

Miss  Clarke  * 

Mr.  Eliot  C.  Clarke 

Mr.  Henry  M.  Clarke 

Mrs.  .John  Storer  Cobb 

Miss  Grace  G.  Cowing 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Cowing 

Miss  Clemence  Crafts 

Mr.  George  G.  Crocker 

Mr.  Frederic  Cunningham 

Mrs.  John  E.  Devlin 
Mrs.  A.  E.  Dwight 

Miss  .Julia  F.  Eaton 

Mr.  Frederic  P.  Fish 
Mrs.  Albert  L.  Fisher 
Mr.  Desmond  Fitzgerald 
Miss  E.  H.  Forgan 

Mrs.  .Josephine  S.  Gay 
Mr.  Edward  W.  Grew 
Mr.  O.  B.  Gilman 

Mr.  Augustus  Hemenway 
Mrs.  John  B.. Hudson 

Mr.  B.  F.  Keith 

Mrs.  Charles  W.  Kennard 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  A.  Kidder 

Mr.  Otto  G.  Kunhardt 

jMrs.  R.  A.  I^awrence 
Mr.  John  Lawrence 
Miss  Madeline  I>awrence 


Mr.  Joseph  Lee 
Miss  Helen  Loring 
Mrs.  Thacher  Loring 
Miss  Georgina  Lowell 

Mr.  George  S.  Mandell 

Mr.  F.  H.  Manning 

The  Misses  Manning 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Marble 

Miss  E.  F.  Mason 

Mass.  Soc.  Prevention  of  Cruelty  to  Animals 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Miss  M.  C.  Mixter 

Mrs.  Francis  J.  Moois 

Mrs.  Fannie  E.  Morrison 

Mr.  John  T.  Morse,  Jr. 

Miss  Ellen  F.  Moseley 

Mrs.  David  Nevins 

Mrs.  William  L.  Parker 
The  Misses  Parsons 
Mrs.  Francis  Peabody,  Jr. 
Mr.  Francis  A.  Peters 
Mrs.  J.  C.  Phillips 
Mr.  D.  L.  Pickman 
Mr.  Wallace  L.  Pierce 
Mr.  A.  E.  Pillsbury 
Mrs.  Sarah  G  Putnam 
S.  S.  Pierce  Company 
Thomas  G.  Plant  Company 
Red  Acre  Farm 
Mr.  Clarence  Reed 
Mr.  Chas.  S.  R'ackemann 
Dr.  W.  L.  Richardson 
Miss  Emma  Rodman 
Miss  Marion  Russell 

Mr.  Francis  Shaw 
Miss  Blanche  Shimmin 
Miss  Roxana  Stackpole 
Mrs.  Daniel  Staniford 
Mrs.  Robert  g.  Sturgis 
Mr  Henry  W.  Swift 

Mr.  Thomas  J.  Talbot 
Miss  Katherine  A.  Tarbell 
Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer 
Mrs.  Charles  Thorndike 

Miss  Elizabeh  J.  Ward 
Mr.  Samuel  D.  Warren 
Mr.  George  Wigglesworth 
Mr.  Franklin  D.  Williams 
Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington 


17 


Concert  program 

From  8  to  10  o'clock  a.  m. 

REVIEWING    STAND 

Imiction  of  L'omnidn wealth  ^Vvciuic  and   llcacon  Street 


14. 


\r^. 


t8. 


MARCH.  "Rocked  ill  the  Cradle  of  the  Deep"  Hayes 

nW.RTVRV..  "I'.eautiful  ( ialatea"  Suppe 

\\\\LTZ.  "Sirring  and  Love"  von  Bloii 
CORNET  S(  )TX).  "Selected."     Mr.  A.  H.  Fisher 

SELECTION.  "Prima  Donna"  Herbert 
POPULAR  SONGS 

REMINLSCENCES  OF  IRELAND  Godfrey 

SELECTION.  "Sonl  Kiss"  Levi 

"TONE  PICTURES  OF  THE  NORTH  AND  SOUTH"  Bendi.v 

^lARCH.  "Uncle  SanU  Fillmore 

SELECTION.  "Carmen"  Bijset 

SELECTION.  "Red  Mill"  Herbert 
POPULAR  SONGS 

WALTZ.  "Girls  of  P.aden"  Kom-.ak 

"WAR  SONGS  OF  THE  P.OYS  IN  BLUE"                '  Tobaui 

"P.OIIE?>IIAN  SERENADE"  vovi  Len;: 

SELECTION.  "Yankee  Prince"  Cohan 
"Star  Spangled  Panner" 


FIRST    CORPS     CADETS     BAND 

lOIIN  P.  FIELDING.  Pandmaster 


THE    HOME    OF 

"QUEEN  QUALITY" 


01^ 


■m 

T-.fBrff  


n  n  i"  -I  ^=f  ^ 


.^^:s^%. 


^ 


5s«f- 


-^=--=^^:=S^^^ 


THE   PLANT   FACTORY   ALONE   NOW   PRODUCES 
ONE-FOURTH    AS    MUCH    SHOE    VALUE    AS    THE 


ENTIRE    CITY     OF    BROCKTON.    ONE-THIRD    AS 


MUCH  AS  THE  CITY  OF  HAVERHILL,  AND  ONE- 


FOURTH  AS  MUCH  AS  THE  CITY  OF  LYNN,  THE 

THREE  GREATEST  SHOE  PRODUCING  CITIES  IN 

THE  WORLD. 

THOMAS  G.  PLANT  COMPANY 

BOSTON,    MASSACHUSETTS 


SOLD   TX   r.OS'l'OX    I'.V   TAMRS   A.   HOUSTON    COMPANY 


20 


VETERAN  DRIVER   CLASS. 

The  AiiKTican  Muinane  I'2ducation  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that 
driver  in  the  ])arade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of 
his  present  em])loyer,  or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  The  Association 
gives  a  second  i^rize  of  ti\e  dollars,  and  also  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  en- 
tered in  this  class  (the  jirize  winner  excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty 
vears  or  over. 


NAME    OF    DRIVER 


NAME    OF    EMPLOYER 


Years 

of 

Service 


STEVE     CONROY 
TIMOTHY   J.   O'CONNOR 
JOHN  B.  CARR 
JOHN  F.  CONNORS 
DENNIS   CPOWLEY 
BENJAMIN  J.   A.   GREEN 
ARTHUR  L.   PERRY 
WILLIAM   B.   SMITH 
ANDREW   J.    MELDON 
JAMES  F.   WALKER 
W.  F.  MEESE 
NYRON    R.    MERRIFIELD 
PATRICK    TOOMEY 
MICHEL  DEVERAUX 
NORRIS   W.    CURRIER 
MICHAEL  F.  BURKE 
JOHN  F.  CONNORS 
MELVILLE    DICKIE 
CLARENCE  H.  JONES 
JAMES   W.   ROBINSON 


William   Gilligan   Company  20 

A\^ilson    Tisdale    Company  20 

Sanitary  Dept.,  Boston  21 

Sanitary  Dept.,  Boston  21 

Batchelder    Bros.  21 

Sanitary  Dept.,  Boston  21 
Standard  Bottling  &  Extract  Co.  21 

Boston   Forge  Company  21 

Curtis   &   Pope   Lumber   Co.  22 

C.  A\'.  AA'alker  Company  22 

L.  A.  AVaterhouse  23 

John   M.  Woods  &  Company  23 

Sanitary   Dept..    Boston  23 

Blinn,   Morrill  &   Company  24 

Boston  Transfer  Company  24 

Boston   Water  Dept.  25 

The   Stetson   Coal   Company  25 

Standard  Oil  Company  25 

S.    S.    Pierce   Company  25 

Standard   Bottlino-  &   Ext.   Co.  25 


21 


"^hoisa'' 
Ceylon    Tea 

Pure  Rich  Fragrant 


1    LB. 

CANISTERiS 

60   CENTS 

1-2    LB. 
CANISTERS 
35   CENTS 


I'acked  in   Parchment-lined 
One  ])<)un(l  and  half-pound   Canisters 

WE  INVITE  COMPARISON  WITH  OTHER  TEAS 
OF  SIMILAR  PRICE 


S.    S.    PIERCE    CO. 


Tremont  and  Beacon  Streets 
Copley    Square 
Coolidge   Corner 


BOSTON 

BOSTON 

BROOKLINE 


VETERAN    DRIVER    CLASS— Continued 


NAME    OF    DRIVER 


NAME    OF    EMPLOYER 


Years 

of 

Service 


THOMAS   H.   HICKS 
WILLIAM    E.    DENVER 

P.  J.  Mcdonough 

JAMES   McLEAN 
OWEN  J.   McNEALY 
JOHN   O'BRIEN 
WILLIAM    DONECLIFF 
PATRICK   HUGHES 
GEORGE    C.    LIENHARD 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
LOUIS  BRIAR 
FRANCIS   P.    BUCKMAN 
PATRICK   McINTIRE 
SOLON   J.   RICHARDSON 
C.  F.  WILLARD 
JOHN  GREEN 
JOHN  M.  LEE 


Curtis   &    Pope    Ln]iil)cr   Co.  26 

C.    F.    Hovey    &   C<im])any  26 

Oak  Grove  Farm  Company  26 

S.   S.    I'ierce  Comp.-'iiy  26 

John    1^    -McXcaly  27 

John    Miller  &  Company  28 

William    (lillig-an    Company  29 

W.  A.  Pevear  &  Company  2!) 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Company  29 

Boston   Elevated  Kailway  Co.  30 

Jordan   Marsh  Company  35 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son  35 

Henry  Craft's  Sons  35 

City   Laundrv  35 

Metropolitan    Coal    Company  35 

Sanitarv   Dept.,   lioston  50 

Postun    Ice    Company  52 


The  \'eteran  Driver's  prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropolitan  Coal  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years ;  in  1905  by 
Thomas  Haley,  an  employee  of  the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co..  with  a  record  of 
40  years;  in  1905  Ijy  1'  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Xewton  Cemetery  Corpora- 
tion for  38  years;  in  \()c/>  1)y  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.  T.  &  A.  G. 
\'an  Xostrand  C"om])an_\-.  his  term  of  service  bCng  44  years;  in  KJO"  by  John 
{•"rancis  Kellev.  em])lo_\ed  by  R.  (  ).  r>rij.ham  fir  42  vears  ;  in  KjoS  1)\-  Thomas 
Colbert,  employed  b}'  Henry  Craft's  Sons,  and  1)\-  James  ilolland.  em])loyed  by 
P.  O'Riorden  Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a  medal,  having  each  served  for  a 
term  of  43  years.  A  s]X'cial  silver  medal  was  also  awarded  to  John  <  Ireen  for  liis 
service  of  49  years  with  the  city  of  Poston. 


23 


METROPOLITAN  COAL  CO. 

30  CONGRESS  STREET    ;.    BOSTON 


24 


CLASS  1—OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  A 

First  Prize:     Silver  Medal,  offered  !)}•  Red  Acre  Farm. 
Second  Prize:     Five  dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Third  Prize:     Five  dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
l-'ourth.  Fifth  and  Sixth  Prizes:    Three  dfillars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  main'  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons, 
with  prizes  oi  onv  dollar  each,  as  they  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 

No.         No.  Horse's        Horse's     Years 

of  of  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  ^,  „  of 

Ribbon   Entry  Name  Age     service 

1  A\al\vorth    .Mfg.   Co.  John    Cray 

2  F.  L.   :\Iooi-e  &  Co.       Alichael  C-mnelly 

3  Russell  &  Co.  Arthur  L.  1',.  Smith 
3a  M.  J.  McLaughlin  James  Rea 

4  L.  :\I.  Dyer  &  Co.,  Inc.  Manuel  Strauss- 

5  A.  A.   Rowe   &  Son.     F.   P.   Buckman=:= 

(Sor.  Voternn  Drivers'  Class) 

6  City  Laundry.         Solon  J.  Richardson-  Faimie    18  11 

(Se.:.  Veteran  Drivers'  I'lassi 

7  X.   E.   Confect'y  Co.   Wm.   E.  A\'illiams 

8  ^lalden   C"al   Co.       "^A'alter   Harrington 

9  E.  B.  Badger  &  Sons  C< >.  Fred.  J.  Galvin 
10  Harry  AA'.  Murphy.  Henry  T.  Leary* 
n     H.   E.   Chase     '  Clarence    K.  Ulm 

12  B.  AV.  O'Xeill  &  Co.  Hugh  J.  AlcNamara 

13  John  T.  Jones  John  T.  Jones 

14  City  Laundry  Drmiel   X.  MacLeod" 

15  A\'e]lington-\A'ild  Coal  Co.     R.  G.  Black 
Ifi  A\'aterman  ^*t  Leavitt    John  E.  Marcou* 

17  Henry   Crafts   Sons  Alichael    Ronan 

18  L.   A.  AA'atcrhonse  Ed.   D.   Stacio 

"^Dri'.er  qualifieil    for    l^arlse. 


Charlie 

15 

10 

Sam 

16 

10 

Donald 

16 

10 

Jerry 

18 

10 

l^.lack 

Beauty 

22 

10 

Xiggar 

25 

10 

Icrrv 

16 

11 

lennie 

17 

11 

Barney 

19 

11 

Xed 

19 

11 

Billy 

18 

12 

Dick 

19 

12 

Aggie 

20 

12 

Ben 

20 

12 

Bell 

31 

12 

Kate 

20 

12 

Fannie 

20 

12 

Billy 

17 

13 

Xigger 

17 

13 

Jumbo 

19 

13 

"Name  on  Every  Piece" 

Chocolate  Bon  Boris 

MADE  OF  THE  CHOICEST  PRODUCTS  OF  THE 
MEDITERRANEAN  COUNTRIES  AND  THE  TROP- 
ICS THESE  CHOCOLATES  HAVE  THE  DELICIOUS 
NATURAL  FLAVORS  OF  PERFECT  PURITY  SKIL- 
FULLY COMBINED.  THEY  ARE  THE  MOST 
TOOTHSO^IE  AND  AT  THE  SAME  TIME  THE 
MOST  WHOLESOME  OF  P.ONRONS.  YOU  NOT 
ONLY  AA'ANT  TO  I-: AT  THEM  FREELY  BUT  CAN 
DO  SO  AND  STILL  BE  HAPPY.  FOR  THESE  SU- 
PERFINE GOODS  WE  GRIND  Ol'R  OWN  CHOCO- 
LATE AND  KNOW  JUST  WHAT  \\E  ARE  (MAYING 
YOU.  FOR  THE  SAME  REASON  AA'E  HAVE 
REACHED  THE  HIGHEST  STANDARD  IN  THE 
PRODUCTION    OF  ::::::: 

}OWKEf  ^  Cocoa 


CLASS  1—OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  B 

l'"ir,st   I'rizc:     Silver   Medal,  ottered  hy  llie  Animal   Ivesciie  1  x-ague. 
Second  Prize:     I'ive  dollars,  ottered  by  Mis>  Julia  11.  Worthington. 
■|  bird  Prize:     Five  dollar^.  t)tt"ered  by  Miss  Julia  il    Wurlbington. 
Fourth  Prize:     Three  elollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
iMlth  Prize:    Three  dollars,  oft'ered  by  the  Association.  • 
In  adtlition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.        No. 

of             uf 

Riblron    Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME                   DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 

Service 

1!) 

Frank  AF  I'.abc^K-k      Frank  Ai.  liabcock 

'Miarlie 

24 

13 

20 

Haddock  Bros.                       J.  F.  Murphy 

Captain 

25 

13 

21 

W.  A.  Pevear  &  Co.         Patk.  Hughes=:= 

(See  Veteran  Diivers'  Class) 

Frank 

19 

14 

22 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son               Daniel   Long 

Nellie 

21 

14 

23 

AA'-alter  A.  Shedd             AA'alter  A.  Shedd 

Kate 

18 

15 

24 

Michael  J.  Shuckrowc  AF  J.  Shuckrowe 

Kate 

20 

15 

25 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.                \\m.  Entwistle^^-' 

P.aby 

21 

15 

26 

John    Talbot                                  J.    Rowell 

Annie 
Rooney 

21 

15 

27 

C.  H.  Nichols  &  Bro.         W.  J.  Regan* 

(AVinner  of  silver  medal,  190S) 

Kate 

21 

15 

28 

E.  S.  Harris  e^  Son        Peter  AIcDonakh^ 

Dan 
Tom 

20 
19 

16 
15 

2!) 

A.   E.   Kenney                         James   B.   (_)rr 

Jack 

21 

15 

30 

C.    W.   \Y2i\kev   Co.      James  F.  Walker- 

(See  \'eteran  Dri\-ers'  Clas.';) 

Prince 

22 

15 

81 

The  Carters  Ink  Co.        Chris.  J.  Malone* 

Billy 

22 

15 

32 

The   Hoyt   Co.        Fredk.   A\".    Lockhart* 

r.en 

29 

15 

33 

Taylor  Bros.'  Faundry  Co.    J.  F.  Bibber 

Dick 

33 

15 

34 

A.  M.  Davis                Edwin   P.   Hudson* 

Baby 

16 

12 

(Orivrr   will   siv.'   an   exliil)ition    of  driviiia; 
wiilKUii  reins) 

Flossie 

26 

20 

*Driv.i-  M 

lalifie-.l    for    liadse. 

27 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 

Try    Our  Laundry 
Work 


COLLECTIONS  MADE  IN  ROSLINDALE,  DORCHESTER. 
SOUTH   BOSTON,   BROOKLINE   BACK   BAY 
AND  CITY. 

Telephone,  283  Roxbury 


CITY  LAUNDRY 

C.  N.  &  F.  A.  CUNNINGHAM,  Proprietors 

82  to  98  West  Lenox  Street 

28 


CLASS  1—OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  C 

First  Prize:    Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 
Second  Prize:    Five  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Third  Prize :     Five  dollars,  oft'ered  by  the  Association. 
Fourth  1'rize:     Three  ilollars.  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  I'rizc:     Three  dollars,  oft'ered  by  the  Association. 

In    addition,    the    Indies    may    award    so    many    "HiLihly    Commended' 
ribbons,  with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.         No. 

of            of 

Ribbon     Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years 

of 

Service 

:i) 

J.    Bierweiler 

John   Brown 

Kate 

21 

16 

m 

The   Boston   Ice 

Co.           John  M.  Lee 

(See  Veteran  Dri'.ers'  Class) 

Johnnie 

21 

16 

37 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

Patk.  J.  Dooley 

Tom 

22 

16 

38 

S.   S.   Pierce   Co. 

Walter  S.   Lockhart* 

Tom 
Jim 

23 

16 

39 

Dellea    Bros. 

Wm.    J.    Casey''' 

Bill 

24 

16 

40 

H.  H.  Fisher 

Theodore  H.  Fisher* 

Xed 
Ben 

24 

28 

16 
15 

41 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co.      Geo.  C.  Lienhard* 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

(Winner     of     silver     medal.     i;i06) 

Major 

26 

16 

42 

C.  L.  York  Co. 

David   Leahy 

Ma- 
Tim 

22 
23 

17 
17 

43  S.   S.   Pierce   Co.  James   McLean='=  Lizzie  23  17 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

44  I.  T.  Tio-he  Co.                   Joseph  O'Neil  Joe  24  17 
4.")     S.  S.  Pierce  Co.        Edward  T.  Higgins*  Xiggcr  24  18 

(Winner  of  silver  medal.  l^nS) 

46  .\nson  F.  Cobb  Anson  F.  Cobb  Billy  28  18 

47  Walter  P.  [ones  Geo.  H.  AVascott  Paddy  28  18 


'Di-iver  ciualified 


CLASS  1—OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  D 

I'^irst  Prize :  Gold  ^Icdal,  otteTcd  1j_\-  the  Mass.  Society  for  the  Prevention 
<if  Cruelty  to  Animals. 

Second  Prize:     Five  dollars,  offered  by  P^red  L.  Jordan. 

Third  Prize:     Five  dollars.  t)ft'ered  bv  the  Association. 

l\)nrth  Prize:    Three  dollars,  oft'ered  by  the  xAssociation. 

Fifth  Prize:     Three  dollars,  oft'ered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended",  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  one  dollar  each,  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 

No.  No.  Years 

of  of  OWNER'S   NAME  DRIVER'S   NAME  Horse's        Horse's         of 

Ribbon       Entry  Name  Age     Service 

48     John    :\Iiller  &  Co.  John  O  Brien=:=  Harr}-      24:  19 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

4!)  W.  C.  Bra}-                            Nathan  Teague  Peggy  24  19 

.")i)  J.  T.  Tighe  Co.                         James  Shea  Charlie  24  19 

.11  -Maiden  Gas  &  Elec.  Co.  Daniel  J.  Foley  Nell  2.")  19 

•')2  Oak   Gro\-e   Farm   Co.     Thos.  J.   Lahey  Peggv  2.")  19 

.18  C.   r.righam   Co.             Wm.   L.   Garrity*  Billy  2fi  19 


14     C.  T!.  Smith  &  Bro.      Robert  F.  Atwood 


^^'hite 
John      2.5  20 


.1.1  Stand.  Bot'g  &  Ex.  Co.    J.  W.  Robinson  Tom  2.1  20 

(See  Veteran  Drix'ers'  Class) 

Ifi  Fay  P)ros.  Co.  Bert  Carter  Prince  27  20 

17  AA  hittemore-A\V)odb'}"  Co.    J.  R.  Dumas*  Spider  25  21 

is  Henry   Crafts   Sons  Benj.   Cotter*  Nellie  27  21 

19  C.    P.righam   Co.  Chas.  A.   Brown*  Tom  27  2.S 

(i<»  John  H.  Fitz])atrick    Jos.  H.  Fitzjiatrick  Babv  29  24 

(51  J.    15.    Smith  Stephen    Kindiall  Sandv  .SO  25 


Walworth  Mfg.  Co 

MAKERS   OF 

THE  GENUINE  STILLSON  WRENCH 
WALWORTH  GATE  VALVES 
WALMANCO     FLANGES 
FLANGED     FITTINGS 
DRUMS  AND  PIPE  BENDS 


MATERIAL    FOR    HIGH    PRESSURE    POWER    PLANTS 


TOOLS   FOR    STEAM   WATER   FILTERS 


GENERAL  OFFICES: 


132  FEDERAL  STREET,  BOSTON,  U.  S.  A. 


NEW    YORK 
PARK   ROW   BUILDING 


SAN     FRANCISCO 
MONADNOCK   BUILDING 


:{2 


CLASS  2— CHAMPION  OLD  HORSES 

In  this  cla^s  Mr  (icorgc  W.  Harrington  offers  a  tir>t  prize  of  Ten  Dollars; 
Mr.  Wni.  !).  (__)uiinl)\-  offers  a  second  prize  of  I'^ive  Dollars,  and  the  Association 
olter>  a  third  prize  ni  Three  Dollars. 


'^°-            ^°-  Horsp'c:  Hnr<;f"'<:  Years 

ct                of              OWNER'S    NAME                      DRIVER'S    NAME  Morses  i-iorse  s              ^ 

Ribbon     Entry                                                                                                                         ^^"^^  Age  service 

( 

()2      |osei)h   Thompson        Jcseph  Thompson  Dick  33           30 

63     Cloo-her  &  Mulrenin        Edw.  McKenzie-  Xell  30           18 

(Winner    of    Gold    Medal,    i;  us. ) 

(id     James   1'.   Weir         Frederick   E.   AA>ir*  Xed  35           24 


CLASS    3— FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  ma}'  award  such  ribhons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  thev  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


No.              No.  No. 

of                    rf                                  OWNER'S    NAME                                         DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon         Entry  Horses 

(lo          I'.oston    Fire    Department              Thomas  J.  h>eley  2 

66  Boston     Fire    Department             George  P.  Smith  2 

67  Boston    Fire   Department              Daniel    F.    Buckle}'  3 

68  Boston    Fire    Department              J.  J.  O'CoiMiell  3 

69  SfMnerville    Fire   Department        George   F.    Bixb^-  2 

70  Somerxille    b'ire   Depaitment        R.  W.  Jesson  3 

_                                                                      .             -  .                ^ 

CLASS  4—U.   S.   LETTER   CARRIERS 

The  Judges  ma}  award  such  ribbon,  h^ir-t  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved,  and  the  .\ssociation  awards  a  --jjecial  i)rize  of  five  dollars  if  the 
entrv  deser\e>  it. 


71  Cornelius    T.    ^lehigan 


HOOD'S  MILK, 


Cream  and  Butter,  a  Necessity  for 
Children  and  Invalids  and  an  Eco- 
nomical Food  for  Everyone 


USED  IN  MORE  THAN  100,000  HOMES.  HOTELS  AND  RESTAU- 
RANTS OF  GREATER  BOSTON,  ARE  PRODUCED  FROM  THE 
SWEET  PASTURAGE  OF  THE  HILLS  OF  NEW  ETvGLAND,  UNDER 
HYGIENIC  METHODS  AND  CONSTANT  CARE  IS  EXERCISED  TO 
REALIZE  THE  HIGHEST  DEGREE  OF  EXCELLENCE  OBTAINABLE 

The  CLEANLINESS  and  PURITY  Resulting  from  the  SANITARY  IN- 
SPECTION OF  DAIRIES  is  the  BEST  PROOF  of  the  Success  Obtained 

II()()1)"S  l'r(.(hicts  retain  lluMr  lrcslincs>,  wlu'ii  kci)t  cool,  for 
an  unusual  tinu',  ])v\u'^  constantly  in  demand  for  distant  ship- 
ment including-  ocean  \oya^es.  Physicians  i;-i\-e  fre(|nent  testi- 
mony  to  their  value   for  infants  and   invalids. 

While  still  perfectly  fresh  HOOD  FARM 
MILK  won  an  award  cf  Merit  for  excellence 
of  quality,  at  the  National  Dairy  Show  As 
sociation  pjxhil)ition,  held  under  the  direc 
tion  of  the  United  Sta.es  Department  of 
Agriculture  at  Chicago,  Illinois,  February 
1906,  after  having  fallen  the  longest  journey 
of  any  of  the  twenty-one  lots  of  milk  ex- 
hibited. HOOD  FARM  MILK  alto  won  the 
first  premium  for  excellence  of  quality,  of 
fered  l)y  the  Granite  State  Dairyman's  As 
sociation,  at  an  exhibition  held  at  Peter 
borough.  New  Hami)sh;re,  December  7,  1906 

CREAM  AND  ALL  DAIRY  PRODUCTS 

GENERAL  OFFICES  AND  CHEMICAL  AND  BACTERIOLOGICAL 
LABORATORY,  494  RUTHERFORD   AVE.   CHARLESTOWN.    MASS. 

DAIRY  LABORATORY      :  :         70  Huntington  Avenue,  Boston,  Mass. 

MODEL  CREAMERY,        7  Beacon  and  55  Tremont  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


BRANCH    OFFICES 


24  Anson  St.,  FOREST  HILLS,  MASS, 
289  Pleasant  St.,  WATERTOWN,  MASS. 
425  Main  St.,  MALDEN,   MASS. 


193  Alley  St.. 
252   Bridge   St., 
629   Common    St., 


LYNN,   MASS. 

SALEM,    MASS. 

LAWRENCE,    MASS. 


CLASS  5— CITIES  AND    TOWNS 

PARK    DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  may  award  such  riljlxms,  iMrst.  Second  nv  Idiird  as  they  deem 


to  be  deserved. 


No.  No. 

of  If 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


72 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

James  '1\    Donley 

73 

City  of 

Boston 

(ParkDept) 

Cornelius    Downey 

74 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

Denis   Daley- 

75 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

\V.  J.   Donley 

76 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

James  O'Xcil- 

76a 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

J.  J.  O'Brlon 

76b 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

J.   Cronin 

2 

76c 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

J.  J.   Melynn 

2 

77 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

John  F.  Coakley 

2 

78 

City   of 

J)Oston 

(Park  Dept) 

Michael   C'mdry* 

2 

79 

City   of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

Patrick    Daily 

2 

80 

City  of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

Bernard    Fay 

2 

SI 

City   of 

Boston 

(Park  Dept) 

Patrick  Sheehan 

2 

CLASS  6— CITIES  AND   TOWNS 

BRIDGE,   SANITARY   AND  WATER    DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved.  In  this  class  Air.  Benjamin  W.  Wells,  formerly  Superintendent 
of  Streets,  offers  a  special  [)rize  of  ten  dollars  for  the  best  old  horse,  the  money 
to  ifo  to  the  driver. 


82 

83 

84 

85 


Litv 


-ton    (San.   Dept' 


BENJAMIN  A.  GREEN     1 
TOHN  GREEN 


Diiveis'  Clas.s> 


City  of  Boston  (San.  Dept.) 
City  of  B 


Wm.  F.  Blake 


86 

87 
88 

Tn-iver  nualified   for 


ton   fSan.  Dept.)    JOHN  B.  CARR* 

(See  Veteinii  Drivers'  Cla.ss) 

City  of  Boston   (San.  Dept)   JOHN  F.  CONNERS 

I. See  V.'tcraii  Drivers'  Class) 

City  of  Boston  (San.  Dept)  John  J.  Murphy* 
City  of  Boston  (San.  Dept)  James  O'Donnell 
City  of  Boston    fSan.  Dept)    PATRICK  TOOMEY* 


C.  F.   HOVEY  &  CO. 

IMPORTERS       AND       RETAILERS       OF 

DRY    GOODS 


Sole    Agents    for    Boston    for    the    Celebrated 

Alexandre    Kid    Gloves 

MEDALS    AWARDED    THE    AL\N1UFAC- 
TURERS     AT     EVERY     WORLD'S    FAIR 

33  Summer  St.      .      .      .     42  Avon   St ,  Boston 

i:sT  \i;llshJ':d  1855  telephone  3:46  oxford 

WHIPPLE    &    COMPANY,  Inc. 

TRUCKMEN 

OFFICE: 

1 66   Essex  Street,  Boston 


STANDS 

Corner  Lincoln  and  Tufts  Streets  Corner  Pearl  and  Purchase  Streets 

69  Chauncy   Street  .  Miiton  Place 

218    Purchase    Street 


36 


CLASS  6— CITIES  AND  TOWNS— Continued 

No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry Horses 

89  City  of  Boston  (San.  Dept)  JoItu  J.  Go\-crn 
8f)a  Cityof  Boston  (Water  Dept)  Michael  Mulkern 
Snb  e'ity  of  Boston  (W^ater  Dept)  David  Le' 
SDc  City  of  Boi.ton  (Water  Dept)  Tliomas  Williams 
S!)d  City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept)  ?\Iichael  R.)nan 
89e  City  of  Boston  (\\'ater  Dept)  Edward  Sullivan 
8i)f  City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept)  ]>Am  Regan.  Mare  with  foal. 
8i)o-  City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept)  Mathew  Xolan  2 
8!)h  City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept)  Jerry  McClaughlin  2 
89i  City  of  Boston  (  Water  Dept.)  Patrick   Cnrren                         2 

90  City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept)  MICHAEL  F.  BURKE-      2 

,  (See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

CLASS  7— DELIVERIES:  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Jutlges  niav  award  such  ri1)bons.  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


:»1 

r.oston 

American 

J.   Barr 

92 

Boston 

American 

D.  Dono\an 

98 

JJoston 

American 

A.  Barr 

94 

B)Oston 

American 

D.  Gilbert 

95 

\\'ilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

A.  Williams 

96 

\\-ilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

John   Aheari: 

97 

^^•i]son 

Tisdale 

Co. 

John   Driscoll 

98 

Wilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

M.  J.   Shea 

99 

Wilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

Tim   O'Connor.    Jr. 

100 

AA'ilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

T.  J.  O'CONNOR 

iSe^-  \"eterati  Drivers'  Class) 

101 

AVils.m 

Tisdale 

Co. 

William   (Crimes 

102 

A\il^(.n 

1"isdale 

Co. 

John   Daly 

lo;5 

Wilson 

Tisdale 

Co. 

Con.  Curt  in 

2 

'Dri\-fr  (|u 

aiified    fr)r    1 

a.lge. 

37 


WHITING'S    MILK 


THE  PUBLIC  IS  INVITED  TO  CALL  TO 
OUR  ATTENTION  NOT  ONLY  CASES  OF 
ABUSE  OF  OUR  HORSES.  BUT  ALSO 
CASES  OF  CARELESS  AND  INJUDICIOUS 
DRIVING 


WHITING'S    MILK 


Compliments     of 


THE 


STAR  BREWING 
COMPANY 


THE  STETSON 
COAL  COMPANY 


Wharf  and   Main  Office: 

496   First    Street 

SOUTH     BOSTON 


JOHN  A.  STETSON 

President    and    General    Manager. 

ROBERT     D.     HALL. 

Treasurer. 


^S 


CLASS  8— BARREL  RACKS 

The  jiuli^cs  may  award  such  ril)hons,  First.  Second  or  Tliird  as  they  deem 
1(1  1k'  deserved.  In  adcHlion.  the  London  Harness  Company  otters  a  street 
blanket  for  the  l)est  hor>e,  a^e  considered. 


No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVERS    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry  Horses 


104 

M.   H.   VAvte 

AFichael  H.  Blute 

105 

W.  J.   Can-oil 

John  P.  Farrell 

106 

Peter  F.   Donnelly 

Edward   Kenney 

107 

John  \\\  Whitney 

Joseph  F.  AIcKenzie* 

108 

John    A\\    Whitney 

John  W.  A\'hitney 

lOD 

John    AA'.    A\'hitney 

Georo'e  Yoiinkers 

CLASS  9— HUCKSTERS 

The  Judi^es  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved.  In  addition,  Aiessrs.  James  Forgie's  Sons  olTer  a  street  blanket 
tor  the  best  horse,  aye  considered. 


110 

Joseph   B.   Burns 

Charles  Sloan* 

111 

W'm.   Cr.    I'urrows 

John  E.  Burrows 

112 

WTn.  G.   Burrows 

A\'m.  J.  Burrows* 

113 

A\'m.   G.   Burrows 

Louis  Dress 

114 

Michael   Coakley 

David  Coakle}^ 

115 

Alartin    F.   Carroll 

John  J.  Riley 

116 

^lartin    F.  Carroll 

John   P.  Carrol] 

117 

Patrick  A.  Conlin 

Patrick  A.  Conlin 

118 

J(^hn  T.  Coiley 

John   T.   Coiley 

nr> 

Thomas  Ford 

Frank   Fustice 

120 

Thomas   Ford 

Thomas  Ford 

121 

S.   drishaver 

Walter  R.  Chamberlain 

*Driver  rma 

lified    fnr    l-:i,lire. 

^^^^^^^^ 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

A.  E.  BLISS 

General   Superintendent 
MALDEN    ELECTRIC    CO. 

MALDEN     AND     MELROSE    GAS 
LIGHT   CO. 


THE  MORSS  &  WHYTE  CO, 

WIRE  CLOTHS 
and  SCREENS 


ELEVATOR  CARS  AND 
ENCLOSURES 

Fancy   Wrought    Iron   and    Brass  Grill    Work 

75    TO    81    CORNHILL 

BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS 
OF 
.  . .  THE .  .  . 
ATLANTIC  WORKS 


J.    E,    Jacobs,     Manager.      Tel..    57    Haymarket 


40 


CLASS  10— EXPRESS— Continued 


No. 

of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


i;j;j 

Boston    &    Springfield 

Despatch   Express   Co. 

140 

Carter-Russell    Co. 

141 

Carter-Russell   Co. 

142 

Chase  &  Co. 

14:! 

W.  I-I.  D-«dge 

144 

W.  H.   Dodo-e 

J  44a 

D.  J.   T^w-er 

14.-) 

Joseph   L.   Fisher 

146 

J<isei-»h  L.  Fisher 

147 

Joseph   L.  Fisher 

14S 

Samuel   Goodwin 

140 

Samuel   C  >odwin 

150 

A\^u.  H.   Harlow 

1..1 

Howe  c^-  Co. 

152 

Howe  6c  Co. 

158 

Howe  &  Co. 

to  be  _ , 
the  b 

Fud\\i'2'  Hupprich 

a  spe  155 

Fudwin-  Hupprich 

^^^1^^15R 

FudwicT  Hupprich 

157 

AA^m.   A.   Keen 

1 5S 

A\"m.   A.   Keen 

150 

AFcKcc   F.ros. 

1 50a 

Michael   T.   Ak-Fouo-hlin 

i(;o 

Alichael    T.   ^fulcahv 

No. 
DRIVER'S    NAME  Of 

Horses 


Edward  W.  Riley 
Geo.  F.  Callahan 
John  H.  Wdson 
Harry   F.   Carlisle 
Harry  Rabaneau 
Oscar  Anderson 
John   F.  Clancy 
Geo.  E.  Dolliver 
John   F.  AVrio-ht 
Fred  Hunter"^ 
Thos.  Harrino-ton 
John  F.  Murray 
Wm.  H.  Flarlow 
John  J.  F.arry 
Edward  T.  Earle 
Clifford  AT.  Hicks 
AA^m.  Russell 
Fred  C.  Hupprich* 
.'Mbert  F.  Hupprich* 
Patk.  Hurley 
Geo.   ?\rao-uire 
Edw.  A.  McKee 
Afichael   J.    AlcFou.Q-hl'n 
John  E.  Alulcahv 


i.Tlified   for   )':ii1q:e. 


48 


^^^^^^^^ 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

A.  E.  BLISS 

General   Superintendent 
MALDEN    ELECTRIC    CO. 

MALDEN     AND     MELROSE    GAS 
LIGHT   CO. 


m  MORSS  &  WHYTE  CO. 

WIRE  CLOTHS 
and  SCREENS 

ELEVATOR  CARS  AND 
ENCLOSURES 

Fancy    Wrouglit    Iron    and    Brass  Grill    Work 

75    TO    81    CORNHILL 

uosroN 


COMPLIMENTS 
OF 
...THE... 
ATLANTIC  WORKS 


J.    E.    Jncohs.     MniLiqer.      Tel.,    57    Hnym.iiket 


CLASS  10— EXPRESS— Continued 


No.           No. 

of                of 

Ribbon        Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

i;j!J 

iioslon    &    Spring-field 

Despatch   Express   Co. 

iMlward  \V.  Riley 

140 

Carter-Russell    Co. 

Geo.  L.  Callahan 

141 

Carter-Russell   Co. 

John  H.  Wdson 

142 

Chase  &  Co. 

Harry   F.   Carlisle 

14:; 

W.   11.   D-«doe 

Harry  ?)abaneau 

144 

W.   11.   Dodo-e 

Oscar  .\uderson 

144.1 

D.   J.    I)\v-er 

John    F.  Clancy 

14:> 

Jose])h    L.   Fisher 

Geo.  E.  Dnlliver 

146 

Jose]ih   L.  Fisher 

John   F.  \\'ri-ht 

147 

Joseph   F.   Fisher 

Fred  Hunter* 

14S 

Samuel   Condwin 

Thos.  FTarrino-ton 

14!) 

Samuel   C  'odwiu 

John  F.  Murray 

l.io 

^^'u^.  IT.   Karlow 

Wm.   H.  Fiarh>\v 

151 

Howe  c^'   Co. 

John  J.  Barry 

152 

Howe  .^-  Co. 

Fdward  T.  Farle 

15.T 

Howe  c'l^  Co. 

Clifford  M.  Hicks 

154 

Fudwi-:-  Hupprich 

Wm.  Russell 

155 

Fudwiq-  Huj^prich 

Fred   C.  Hupprich* 

15n 

Fudwiq:  Hupprich 

.Albert  F.  Hupprich* 

157 

WvA.   .\.   Keen 

Fatk.  Hurley 

1 58 

AA'm.    .\.    keen 

Geo.   Mao-uu-e 

1 50 

McKtc'    F.ros. 

Fdw.  .\.  McKec 

15!)a 

Michael    I.   McFr.uo-hl.n 

Michael   J.    McFou-hl 

'n         1 

i(;o 

Michael    T.   Mulcahy 

John   F.  Mulcaliy 

*DrivPr  (|ua 

ified   for   Ii.mIup. 

4:^ 


New  England's  Largest,   Best  L^hted 
and  Best  Ventilated 

RETAIL    STORE 


A  PLEASANT  PLACE  TO  SHOP 


HENRY    SIECEL    CO. 


Lynn  Office  and  Warehouse,  117  Pleasant  St. 

The 

Brockway-Smith 

Corporation 

DOORS.   WINDOWS   and   BLINDS 

MANTELS.   COLUMNS 

AND   STAIR  WORK 

15    WASHINGTON    ST.,    NORTH 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

Telephone  connection. 


HIGHEST  IN  HONORS 

BAKER'S  Cocoa 


50 


HIGHEST 
AWARDS 

IN 
EUROPE 

AND 
AMERICA 


A  perfect  food,  preserves 
health,  prolongs  life 

Walter  Baker  &  Co.,  Ltd. 

]  stai.iisi.,,1  i7s()       DORCHESTER,  MASS. 


44 


CLASS  10  -EXPRESS— Continued 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entr^ 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


of 
Horses 


Kil 

:\[.   F.   Alunise 

J"se])h  AInnise,  Ji 

1(12 

L".   (i.    rarmenter 

I'red   F.   l>:lahu 

(This   hcrse  \v( 

n    a   spt 

i-ial   ])rize   in   lHos.) 

Ki;] 

F.   W.   Pavitt 

Fredk.  A\\  Pavitt 

1(34 

powers   &    Phelps 

H.  J.  LeClair 

Ifio 

Powers   &-    Phelps 

T.  J.  Adams 

1  fir; 

H.  T.   Riiy- 

H.  T.  Ruo-.o- 

UiT 

H.  T.   Ru-- 

F.   T.  Sexton 

ir,s 

H.  T.  Rugo- 

A\'.   T.  Warner 

1(39 

Patk.  M.  Sheehy 

Jeremiah   Sheehy 

170 

Thompson's   Express 

Co. 

R.  J.  Hurley* 

171 

Thompson's   Express 

Co. 

Percy  Russell 

172 

Thonipson's    Express 

Co. 

T.  H.  Swales 

173 

X.  A'educcio 

N.   A^educcio 

173a 

Walker   P.ros. 

James    Lyons 

17;5b 

\\'alker   Bros. 

Daniel   Wurphy 

'liriver  imalitied    for    had.af 


CLASS  11— MILK  SINGLES 

DIVISION  A. 

icli  ri1)l)i ir.s.  First,  Second  or  ddiird,  as  thev  deem 


The  Judged  ma}-  awc 
to  he  deserved. 


174  C.   P.righam   Co. 

17.")  C.   T.ri^ham   Co. 

170  C.   l'.ri;^ham   Co. 

177  C.   P.rioham   Co. 


C.   p..   Robbins-  1 

Geo.  AA'.  Swinimen*  1 

Howard  P.  Phillips*  1 

AA\   P.   Flcwellin-  1 


45 


JORDAN  MARSH  CO. 

ESTABLISHED  1851 
The  Mercantile  Heart  of  New  England 

REMEMBER 

'J'hat  on  account  of  the  enormous  \-olunie  of  our  1)usiness  —  it  Ije- 
]U'^  larger  tliaii  the  total  of  an)'  three  other  Xew  I^nolanrl  stores 
—  our  assortments  in  each  and  every  department  are  more  than 
twice  as  large  and  complete  as  those  shown  by  any  of  the  other 
stores. 


The  Main  Store— Washington,  Subway  under  Avon  Street  The  House-Furnishino-  Annex- 
Summer  and  Avon  Streets.  The  connecting  our  Two  Great  Avon.  Chauney  and  Bedford 
Largest^  Most  Progressive,    and       Stores.  Streets.    The    Largest    Store    in 

Most     Liberal     Store     in     New  New  England  devoted  exclusive- 

England.  ]y    to    Furniture.    Floor    Cover- 

ings. t)rappries.  Wall  Pai>ers.  etc. 

Whips,  Crops,  Steamer,  Carriage  &  Auto  Robes 

r-  ■ 

J.G.&B.S.  FERGUSON  CO.    J- C.  TALBOT 


THE     LEADING 


BAKERS 


OF    NEW    ENGLAND. 


853  ALBANY   STREET 

BOSTON    .        :     MASS. 


FANCY    AND    STAPLE 

-  Groceries  - 

1157      WASHINGTON      STREET 
DORCHESTER 


Branch  Store : 

Associates   Building      :      :     MILTON 
Established  1815 


46 


CLASS  11— MILK  SINGLES— Continued 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Horses 


178 

C. 

Ih-igham   C'o. 

179 

C. 

Brii^ham  Co. 

180 

c. 

Brig'ham   Co. 

181 

c. 

Brigham  Co. 

182 

Elm   Farm   Milk  Co. 

183 

Elm   Farm   ^Flk  Co. 

184 

El 

11   Farm   Milk  Co. 

185 

El 

m  Farm  Milk  Co. 

186 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

187 

El 

m  Farm  Milk  Co. 

188 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

189 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

190 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

191 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

192 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

193 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

194 

H. 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

195 

H 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

196 

H 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

197 

H 

P.  Hood  &  Sons 

i'honias   JJickson  1 

Jo  si  ah  C  lough*  1 

Alexander    ^IcLean*  1 

Phineas  Hnl)bard  1 

George  Hamilton  1 

F.  Harry  Collins*  1 

Thomas  Concannon  1 

Elias  R.  Hudgins  1 

George-  E.  Taylor  1 

Frank  L.  Dinsmore  1 

John  L.  Cameron  1 

Chas.  W'.  AX'atts  1 

\\"m.  F.  Brady  1 

Charles  A.  Hoyt  1 

A.  F  AVinchenback  1 

Michael  J.  Murphy  1 

W.  P.  Kay  1 

J.  L.  Chisholm*  1 

rylichael  Power*  1 

James  P.  Murphy.  1 


■Di'i\er  qualified    for   baflscf. 


il 


TRADE  y     1^    ^     1^     ^  ^  MARK 

POUND  CAKE 

and  MACAROONS 

QUALITY 

BAKERY Cleanest  and    Most   Modern   in  the  World 

PRODUCT ""^^de    from    the    Purest   and    Best    Materials 

that   money   can    buy 

HORSES Blue    Ribbon   Winners 

DRAKE  BROTHERS  COHPANY 


HIGH   CLASS  BAKING 

BLUE  HILL  AVENUE  and  SAVIN   STREET, 


BOSTON.  MASS. 


FEED 

XTKAVIM  FEED  MOLASSES 

keeps  tlie  stock  in  a  lie;illhy  cdnilition. 
It  helps  assimilate  other  loods,  uiul 
cures  indigestion.  It  imxhices  a  <;lossy 
coat.  It  will  eradicate  worms.  Ask 
your  grocer  or  grain  dealer  for  XTRA- 
\'I.M,  or  .send  for  in  form  a- 


torinlorma-   ^^OL/I  c, 
lion  and  valuahle  hook  .v^'  ^i'. 

on  tlie  discovery  and     '' 
use    of    molasses   as 


.->  v» 


ZO/t; 


api)lied  to  stock.  ^^*    /Tf/i 

m:  .SUHK  TO  SEE  THIS    i^MOLjlSSfS ^ 
1^^        THADEMARK.        *jj  .i,' 


Northampton  Street 
Veterinary  hospital 

Shoeing  Forge 

CRONON I  m 

BOSTON  Telephone  No.  1  Tremont 


48 


CLASS    11— MILK  SINGLES— Continued 

DIVISION  B. 


The  Judges  may  award  sue! 
to  be  dc>cr\rd. 


irsl,  Seco 


)!'  Tliir 


tlic\'  dfcm 


No.  No. 

of  0 

Ribbon       Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


of 
Horsss 


1!»S 

.\l.  j.    .Manning's  Son.^ 

1!)}) 

(ifo.   H.   Xoone 

200 

Oak   Grove 

Farm  Co. 

201 

Oak   Grove 

Farm  Co. 

202 

Oak   Grove 

Farm   Co. 

2o;] 

(Jak   Grove 

Farm  Co. 

204 

(  )ak   Grove 

Farm   Co. 

205 

Oak   Gro\e 

Fa 

rm    Co 

20G 

Oak   Gro\e 

Farm   Co. 

207 

Oak   Gro^-e 

Fa 

rm   Co. 

208 

Papkee   Bros. 

200 

M.   Goldman 

•    210 

\\'aiimesit   Farm 

211 

T.   K.   \\'hitino- 

&  Co. 

212 

J.   K.  \A'hkino- 

&  Co. 

21.3 

D.  AAhiting 

& 

Sons 

2U 

D.  AA'hitin^ 

& 

Sons 

21.-) 

D.  Whitino- 

& 

Sons 

216 

D.  Whitino- 

& 

Sons 

217 

D.  Whitino- 

& 

Sons 

218 

D.  Whitino- 

& 

Sons 

21P 

D.  Whitino- 

& 

Sons 

John   F.   Calahan 
Harman  F.  Noone* 
Sidney  Foster 
Thos.  J.  Griffin* 
R.  E.  Tohiian 
Gilbert  V.  Smith* 
H.  G.  W^ood* 
Alvin    Kelic}' 
Patrick  J.  McDonough* 

(See  Veteran  Drivei's'   Class) 

James  Dowd 
Harry  Barrv 
Fred  Vauohn 
Herbert  C.  \A'est* 
Robert   Heqlett 
Fdward  Johnson 
Edward  H.   Everton* 
Harry  L.  Fallon 
Joseph  H.  Hanscom 
Joseph  I^^  Hanson 
Walter  H.  Hawes 
A\'esley  E.  Hayes 
Ivan  C.  Phelps* 


*Driver  rjunlifierl  for    harlse. 


40 


COMPLIMENTS     OF 


.COMPLIMENTS     OF 


The    White    Company 


J.      S.      HATHAWAY 
New   Enoland   Manager 


50 


CLASS  12— MILK  DOUBLES 


The  jiidi^e^  may  aw; 
t(i  1)C  (k'scr\-c'(l. 


icli  ril)!),, 


'riiird,  as  the\-  deeni 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon        bntry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Horses 


220  C.   P.rig-harn   Co. 

221  C.    P.riohani  Co. 

222  l<:ini    Farm    Milk  Co. 
22:5-  H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

224  H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

225  Oak   Grove   Farm   Co, 

226  D.  Whitino-  &  Sons 

227  D.  A\hiting-  &  Sons 

228  D.  A\'hitine  &  Sons 


Albert  D.  Blackey  2 

Robert  Coulter*  2 

Alurdock  Alatherson  2 

Fred  AV.   Carnes*  2 

George   Lord"  2 

Frank  A.  Horgan  2 

Clayton  E.  Everton*  2 

Hercule  J.  Girou  2 

T.  A\\   ^IcDonald  2 


"Driver  qualified  for 


CLASS  13— BAKERS'  SINGLES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


229 

J.  W. 

Alden 

2-SO 

J.  w. 

Alden 

281 

J.  w. 

Alden 

2.S2 

J.  w. 

Alden 

283 

J.  w. 

Alden 

234 

J.  w. 

Alden 

285 

J.  w. 

Alden 

236 

Drake 

Bros.  Co. 

Leonard  R.  Clark  1 

L.  H.  Lipshultz  1 

B.  G.  Cable  1 

Wm.  L.  O'Donnell  1 

Charles  F.  Wyman  1 

Fred  J.   Beauchamp  1 

Edward  E.  Morse  1 

Harrv  T.  Cook  1 


-.    51 


R    H.    WHITE    CO. 

IN  THE  MEX"S  STORE.  2d  FLOOR 
OFFER  -  COMPLETE  -  STOCK  -  OF 

Men's  Clothing,  Shoes,  Hats  and 
Furnishings 

AT  THE  LOWEST    PRICES    IN  BOSTON 


I 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


The  Carter's  Ink  Company 


BLINN,  MORRILL 
&  COMPANY 

TRUCKMEN 


6  CHATHAM    ROW 


113        FRANKLIN        ST. 


BOSTON 


CLASS  13— BAKERS'  SINGLES— Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

237 

Drake    Bros. 

Co. 

\\\  J.   Osborn 

238 

Drake    I'.ros. 

Co. 

A.   J.  Jackson 

239 

Drake    Bros. 

Co. 

Chas.  \\\  Robinson* 

240 

Drake  Bros. 

Co. 

k'rank  J.  .^iraine" 

241 

Drake   Bros. 

Co. 

Vw'd  W .  ( ;ardner''= 

242 

Drake   Bros. 

Co. 

Albert  H.   Robinson 

243 

Drake  BiOs. 

Co. 

William  Croke" 

244 

O.   B.  Oilman 

Henry   McGowan* 

245 

Henry  Hock 

&  Son 

Henry  J.  Hock 

246 

Loose-Wiles 

Biscuit  Co 

Joseph  ^[    Afeanev^ 

247 

L(.ose-AA-i1es 

Biscuit 

Co. 

deo.  J.   O'Brien 

248 

L()ose-A\'i'ies 

Biscuit 

Co. 

Josei^h    1^.   Collins 

*Driver  qualified  for    liadg-e. 

CLASS  14— BAKERS'  DOUBLES 

The  Judges  nia\-  award  such  ribljons.  First.  Second  or  Idiird,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


249  (;.    H.    Bent    Co.  C.  A.  (iriggs.  Jr.  2 

250  J.  G.  &•  B.  S.  Ferguson  Co.  Thos.  C.  Hunt  2 

251  J.  G.  &   i;.  S.  Ferguson  Co.  James  A.  Powers  2 

252  J.  G.  &  ]!.  S.  Ferguson  Co.  David  Smith  2 

253  Geo.    G.    Fox   Co.  Fewis    F.    I'.ishop^!-'  2 

254  Geo.    G.    Fox    Co.  Wm.    H.    X'aughn*  2 

255  LooseA\'iles    Biscuit    Co.  Fdmund   \y .    DriscolF-'  2 

256  Loose-Wiles    Biscuit    Co.  Patrick    Gillespie  2 

257  Loose-^Mles    Biscuit    Co.  John   Gillespie  2 

♦Driver  qualified  for   badfje. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


Ginn  &  Company 


29    BEACON    STREET. 


The     Beer    that     Made     Milwaukee     Famous 


Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 


General    N.    E.    Agents   of   the 
Jos.  Schlitz   Brewing  Co.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


Wholesale     Dealers,     Importers     and 

Bottlers    of   High    Grade 

Goods   Only 


340-350    C    ST.,    SOUTH    BOSTON 


Teleijhone   Connection 


FOR  OVER  38  YEARS 

WE    HAVE    BEEN 
MAKERS    OF 

GOOD   HARNESS 
AND  COLLARS 

JAS.    FORGIE'S   SONS 


19    AND    20    SOUTH    MARKET    ST. 

Albany     St.     and      Massachusetts     Ave. 

BOSTON 


John    M.   Woods  E.   D.   Walker 

W.  E.  Cliambei-lain 


JOHN  M.  WOODS  &  CO. 

WHOLESALE 
RETAIL 

Hardwood  Lumber 

AIR    DRIED    AND    KILN    DRIED 


SPECIALTIES 

MAHOGANY      WHITEWOOD 
QR.  SYCAMORE  CHERRY 

OAK  ASH  WALNUT 


223-239  Bridge  Street 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE    MASS. 


Telephone,    Cambridge    1430'. 


CLASS  15— LAUNDRIES 

DIVISION  A. 

The  Judges  mav  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

258 

Allston  Hand 

Laund 

ry 

John  Tehan 

259 

Allston   Hand 

Laund 

ry 

S.  J.  Dickson 

2  GO 

Allston  Hand 

Laund 

ry 

Wm.  F.  Frizzell* 

261 

Allston   Hand 

Laund 

ry 

Jas.  J.   Dale- 

262 

City 

Laundry 

Henry  Barnard* 

263 

City 

Laundry 

Morris  Daniels* 

264 

City 

Laundry 

James   O'Brien* 

265 

City 

Laundry 

W.   W.   Paterson* 

266 

City 

Laundry 

Joseph   Farrell* 

267 

City 

Laundry 

W'm.   McNeily 

268 

City 

Laundry 

Frank  S.   Wells* 

269 

City 

Laundry 

F.  H.  Ames* 

270 

City 

Laundry 

H.  F.  Upham 

271 

City 

Laundry 

Wm.  M.  Paterson* 

272 

Colonial   T.aun 

ed  for   badgp. 

dry 

Thomas  F.  Rcardon 

*Dri 

ver  qiialif 

DIVISION  B. 

The  Judge?  mav  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 

278  I '.ay  State  Clean  Towel  Co.     John   B.   Fay*  1 

274         Beacon   Laundry  John   Passalacque  1 

^Mirivei-  nualified   for  l.adprt^. 


Telephone,  1710  Roxbury 


Oak  Grove  Farm  Co. 

ALDEN  BROTHERS.  Proprietors 
WHOLESALE   AND    RETAIL 

Milk  and  Cream 

1171   TREMONT   STREET 
BOSTON 


AUSTIN  GOVE  &  SON 

INCORPORATED) 

Dealers  in 

COAL,    WOOD    and 
MASON    SUPPLIES 

WHARVES,  212   BORDER   STREET 
EAST  BOSTON 

Teleplione  120 


Allston  Laundry 

H.    G.    PRESCOTT.    Proprietor 

-^     ^     -^ 

6,     8,     10     BRAINTREE     STREET 
ALLSTON.   MASS. 


Thos.  T-  Priest 


Tames  T.  Smith 


Priest  &  Smith 

BOARDING,  BAIT- 
ING, LIVERY  AND 
SALE      STABLE 


First  Class  Horse  Shoe- 
ing :    also    Clipping-    by 

Electricity       :      :      : 


68  to  74  Northampton  Street 

Telepiione,  325   Roxbury 

D.  A.  SMITH  CO. 

Truckmen 

LIGHT    AND    HEAVY    TEAMING 
45  ATLANTIC  AVE. 

Telephone   Richmond   928 


C.  B.  SMITH  &  BRO. 

WHOLESALE   GROCERS 

AND    WHOLESALE    DISTRIBUTORS 

AND   OWNERS   OF 

State  House  Flour 


CLASS  15— LAUNDRIES— Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

275 

Echvard   E.    I-Iannaford 

Harry   S.  Johnson 

276 

Ideal  Towel   Supply 

Co. 

Waldo    |>.    Urazier 

277 

E.   S.   Locke 

John    h\    Kinirv 

278 

L.  W.  Myers 

Frank  Connors 

279 

L.  AA\  Myers 

\ym  Cross 

280 

L.  W.  Myers 

Geo.   Perham 

281 

Trimoiint  Laundry 

Oakley  P.   Creamer 

282 

Trimount  Laundry 

John  H.  Gin  grass 

283 

Trimount  Laundry 

.     Benj.   Matfis 

284 

Trimount  Laundry 

Frank  H.  Spinney 

285 

AA^althani   Laundry  Co. 

Edward  J.  Goodwin 

286 

John   E.  Welch 

Patrick   J.   Hennessey* 

*Dii\ 

er  (|ual 

ifled    for  liads'"?. 

CLASS  16— GAS  AND  ELECTRIC  LIGHT  COMPANIES 

The  Judge-^  ma}-  award  such  ribbons.  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  l)e  deserved. 


2S<  Caml)ri(lgc   Gas   Light  Co.  Thos.  J.  Greene* 

288  Cambridge   Gas   Light  Co.  Fred  E.  Seward 

289  Caml)ridge   Gas  Light   Co.  Robert  E.  Dunbar* 

290  Cambridge   Gas   Light  Co.  Patrick    1.    .McCartan* 

291  Cambridge   Gas  Light  Co.  Michael   V.    Marr* 

292  Chelsea  (jHs  Lioht  Co.  Geo.  A.  Logan 


'Driver  qualified    for  badge. 


57 


Thirty  Second  Year. 


Helping  Men  to  Help  Themselves. 


Boston   Industrial  Home 

INCORPORATED 

CORNER  DAVIS  ST.  AND  HARRISON  AVE. 

COAL  and  WOOD 


We  delivtr  anywhere,   in  any  quantity,  at  lowest  prices. 


Every  Order  Means  Relief  to  the  Poor 


Telephone  658  Trcniont. 


OLR'ER  C.  ELLIOT.  SiiperintenUent 


Buy 

Red  Acre  Farm 

CHASE'S 

( Incorporated) 
STOW,    MASS.                Station,    South   Acton 

>-    ^    ^ 

HUMANE     HOME     for     ABUSED 

SUPERFINE    FAWN 

and    INJURED    HORSES 

WOOL           SQUARE 



BLANKETS 

Old  Favorites  Pensioned  for  Life 

Country   Rest  for  City  Working  Horses. 

Best    Blanket    for    Truck    Purposes  — 
Look     for    .the     Three     Horse    Head 
Trade-Mark  —  V/hen    Buying    Hack 
Robes    Look  for  the  Word       :       :       : 

Worn-out    and    Aged    Horses    Rescued    from 
Cheap  Sales  Stables  and  Junk  Wagons. 

-f     >    -f 

" CHASE " 

SUPPORTED     BY    CONTRIBUTIONS 

P.   0.    Box   400.   STOW. 

58 


CLASS  16— GAS  AND  ELECTRIC  LIGHT  GO'S.— Continued 


No.  No 

of  of 


No. 
OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 


Ribbon       Entry  Horses 


29:5  Chelsea   Has  Light  Co.  Jose])h   M.   Riley 

294  Chelsea  Gas   Light  Co.  Frank  E.  Luuly 

295  Chelsea  Cas   Light  Co.  Wm.  H.   Pettingell 

296  Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co.  Wm.  A.  Ainieda 

297  Chelsea  Gas   Light  Co.  Albert  H.  Roberts,  Jr. 

298  Chelsea  Gas   Light  Co.  Roy   L.   Simmons 

299  Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co.  Benj.   N.  Vaughn 

300  Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co.  Patrick  J.  Sharkey 
801  Chelsea  Gas  Light  Co.             b?  p.'' j!"siTarkS" 

302  Maiden    Electric   Co.  P.   Earrah 

303  Maiden    Electric   Co.  John  Silliker 

304  Maiden   Electric   Co.  D.  Eoley 

305  ^lalden  &  Melrose  G.  L.  Co.   Dennis  J.  Buckley 

306  :\Ialden    &    Melrose  G.  L.  Co.   J.  O'Connor 

307  ALilden    &   Melrose  G.  L.  Co.   J.  J.   Buckley* 

308  ^iRlden  &  Melrose  G.  L.  Co.   P.  Griffin 

309  Suburban   Gas  &  Elec.   Co.     John  E.  Pugh 

310  Suburban   Gas  &  Elec.   Co.      Paul  P.  Tucker 

311  Suburban   Gas   &   Elec.   Co.      James  Maun  1 

312  Suburban  Gas   &  Elec.  Co.     Wm.   Chisholm*  1 


►Driver  qualified   for   badge. 


59 


Boston  New  York         Naples    (Italy) 

P.  Pastene&Co. 

Incorporated 
BOSTON,    MASS. 


IMPORTERS  AND  EXPORTERS 

ITALIAN      GROCERIES 

Agents  of  the  finest  and  best  known 
brands  of  "A.  GAROFALO"  and  "P.  P.  C." 
:\IACARONI   and    other   specialties. 


Owners  of  "PURITY  '  brand  pure  OLIVE 
OIL;  recommended  by  physicians  for  its 
medicinal  qualities  and  by  experts  for  its 
delicajte  and  pleasant  flavor. 

TRY   IT. 


illefs  "Gamecock" 

THE    KING    OF   ALL    WHISKIES 

JOHN    MILLER   &   CO. 

Sole  Proprietors 
PARK    SQUARE  :  BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

UNION  GLASS 
COMPANY 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 


Boston   Rubber   Shoe 
Company 


*     *r    * 


JOHN   W.  WHITNEY 

BARRELS 

9      CHESTNUT      STREET,      SOMERViLLE, 
MASSACHUSETTS. 

Telei)li(ine.   157i(-2   Somerville. 

A   FREE   CLINIC   FOR   ANIMALS 
OF   THE   POOR 

is    maintained    daily    from 
2  to   3  o'clock  by  tlie  new 

COMMONWEALTH        HOSPITAL 

FOR  ANIMALS 
24   Cummington   Street,  Back  Bay 

Tt^lepliune    2lt46    I'.ac-k     Hay 


60 


CLASS  17— DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  judi^c^  may  award  such  rihl)ons,  First,  Seccjiid  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 


No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S     NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon      Entry  Horses 

.'■18  S.   H.   Ai)])leman  John   j.   r)')no\an 

:n4  John    L.    Dnttley  Richard    1'.   Duttley 

••n.")  h:stabro()k   &   Eaton  Chas.  K.   Rn-ers* 

:n(i  (iibson    Tea    e^   Coffee   Co.        John  W  .   Irving- 

•'!17  Lewis  Jesselsohn  Henry  AIcKenzie* 

818  A.   Leuthy   &  Co.  John  C.  Sawbridge 

81!)  J.  W.  AIcK.nany  Frank  J.  Watson 

820  C.  H.  Xicliols  &  Bro.  Albert   E.   Taylor* 

821  Penn  "The   Florist"  Thos.  E.  O'Connell* 

822  Smith  &  Cohen  Isaac   Smith 
828  A.   P.   Willey  O.  A.   Becker 

*Driver  qualified  for  badge. 


CLASS  18— DELIVERIES,  DEPARTMENT  STORES 

'idle  ludge^  inav  a\var<l  such  ribbons.  First.  Second  or  lliird,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deser\-ed.  Pilaster  Clarence  Reed  offers  a  prize  of  $5  for  the  best  old 
horse,  the  monev  to  go  f"  the  dri\-er. 

824         C.   F.   Hovey  &  Co.  Lewis  H.  .\dams*  1 

82o         C.    F.    H.n-ey   &   Co.  James  H.  Padden-  1 

82(i         C.   F.  Hosey  &   Co.  WM.  E.  DENVER*  1 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

:V21         Jordan   ^farsli   Co.  A.   York  1 


♦Driver  qualified  for   lodge. 


McCALL,  the  HARNESS  MAN 

353    RUTHERF 
'  Prices. 

I     B 


353    RUTHERFORD    AVE. 
Get  Our  Prices.  See  Our  Stocks 


CUSTOM-MADE    COLLARS 

WOOD-TREE,       SADDLES     AND 

HAND-MADE   HARNESS 

A  SPECIALTY 

Established   1S6S       Telephone,  384  Charles  luwii. 


JOHN  R.  KIELTY 

BROKER 
50    Congress   Street,    Boston,    Mass. 


-Member  of  Boston   Cnrb  Exchange. 
Telephone,    Main    -1301. 
Private  Wire  to   Boston   Curb. 

Orders    Executed    on    All    Exchanges. 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

J. 

L  TICHE  COMPANY 

BEST   GRADES 

Porter's    Market 

FAMILY   AND  STEAM 

COAL 

151  SUMMER  STREET 

LOWEST    CASH    PRICES 
Telephone   156   South    Boston 

WHARF,      .      .      FIRST  ST.,  FOOT  OF  F  ST. 

BOSTON 

YARD 

.       .       .      331    WEST   FOURTH    ST. 
SOUTH    BOSTON 

S.  G.  Parker  Co. 

87    ALBANY    STREET 

SODA    WATER,  SARATOGA 

SPRING  WATERS 

AND 

Dr.   Swett's   Genuine   Root   Beer 
IN    FOUNTAINS 

(;2 


Daniel  f.  McCormack 

Practical  tlorse  Shoer 

523  COLUMBIA  ROAD 
DORCHESTER 


DELIVERIES,  DEPT.  STORES— Continued 


No.            No. 

of               of 

Ribbon      Entry 

OWNER'S     NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

328 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

J.  J.   Boylan 

329 

Jordan   Marsh  Co. 

J.  Hegarty=== 

330 

Jordan   A[arsh  Co. 

W.  Stewart 

331 

Jordan   Marsh  Co. 

J.  Gagan''= 

332 

Jordan   ^[arsh  Co. 

LOUIS  BRIAR 

(See  Veteran  Drivers' 

Cla.«s) 

333 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

J.  Finn* 

334 

Jordan   Marsh  Co. 

T.    Lonergan''' 

335 

J.u-dan   ^larsh  Co. 

J.  A.  Rega.i 

33  r, 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

T.  Kerian 

337 

Henrv   Sieoel   Co. 

Morris   Burns 

338 

Henr}'  Siegel   Co. 

John  Coyne 

339 

Henry   Siegel   Co. 

Arthur  Wright 

340 

Henry  Siegel   Co. 

Jack  Adan.s 

341 

Henry  Siegel  Co. 

Thos.   Connors 

342 

Henry   Siegel   Co. 

Joseph  Kelly 

343 

R.  H.  AA'hite  Co. 

C.  J.   Moynihan 

344 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thos.  J.  Connelly 

345 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Jas.  J.  Stuftle* 

346 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

Thos.   Murphy 

347 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

T.   F.   Murphy 

348 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

T.  J.   Driscnll 

2 

*Driver  qualified  for   badge. 

63 


R.A.KENNETT 


TRUCKMAN    and 


FORWARDER 


6  FULTON  STREET 


BOSTON 


Telephone,   30    Richmond 


Compliments  of 


Hotel 

BUCKMINSTER 

CORNER  BEACON  ST. 
and  COMMONWEALTH 
AVENUE        :        :        :        : 


Telephone  Richmond  632 

Stillman  Bottling 
Company 

Bottlers  ot 
LAGER     BEER,     ALE     AND     PORTER 

42    AND    44    STILLMAN    STREET 
BOSTON 


LOCKE  COAL  CO. 

Maiden  &,  Medford 


Telephone   :MRin    1767 

A.    A.    ROWE    &   SON 

Forwarding     Agents     and     Truckmen 

Custom    Hcuse    Brokers 
32    INDIA    WHARF      ....        BOSTON 


Compliments  of 


Fells  Ice  Company 


CA 


CLASS  19— PROVISIONS,   LIGHT  HORSES 

DIVISION  A 

Tlif  JikIi^c's  ina_\-  award  such  ril)l)()ns.  iMrst,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  dccni  tc 


No. 

No. 

No. 

of 

of 

OWNER 

S 

NAME 

DR 

VER 

S 

NAME 

of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

Horses 

84!)  J.  D.  I'rennan  C.  Harrinoton 

:550  F.   L.   I'.rust  T.  J.  Tighe 

851  1.   j.    I '.urns  J.  J.  Burn.s 

852  L.  Canah  W.    L.   Benardi 
SryA  Casey  &  Roth  E.   I.   Roth 
858a  Clayton  Market  \\.   Heuman 

854  Downes  &  Sons  M.  AA\   Magee 

855  L.  ^r.  Dyer  &  Co.,  Inc.  A.  A.  Austin 

856  L.  A[.  Dyer  &  Co.,  Inc.  T.  H.  F.   Murphy* 

857  J.  C.  Dolan  W.    S.    Brittain 

858  J.  C.  Dolan  J.  H.   Sheehan 

859  \V.  J.   Dolan  J.   H.   Welch 

860  \\\   D.  Halward  R.  E.  Davis 

861  H.  M.  Lamb  A.    E.    Webb 

862  .v.  J.   A\'einstein  S.   \\"einstein 

862a  T.  P.  Lawrence  &  Co.  E.  M.  Stainding-er  (Muies) 


^Driver  qualifiefl   for     liadst 


65 


THE  SPRING 


With  TEN  YEARS'  Positive  Success  —  With  TWO 
YEARS'  GUARANTEE— That  Helps  the  Horse  and 
SAVES   you   MONEY— That  WEARS  for  YEARS 


Samson    Draught    Spring    Co. 


46     FLORENCE     STREET 


J.  J.  SHAY,  Treasurer 
Price  $o.Oii  per  pair. 


Somerville,  Mass. 
All   Parts   Constantly  ou  Hand 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


A    FRIEND 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

The 

Rescue  Mission 

WOOD   AND   COAL   YARD 

65   WEST   DEDHAM   STREET, 
BOSTON. 


1886 


TWENTY-THREE    YEARS    DOING    ONE 
THING,        AND        DOING        IT        WELL 


1909 


We  have  customers  today  who  started  with  us  twenty-three  years  ago,  and 
employes  who  have  heen  with  us  eighteen  and  twenty  years.  There  has  been 
no  change  in  management  from  the  start.  We  can  please  you  as  well  as  we 
have  pleased  others. 

BAY  STATE  CLEAN  TOWEL  COMPANY 


6a  PARK  SQUARE 


(J.  L.  MOULDING,  Proprietor 
Telephone  Oxford  424 


BOSTON,  MASS. 


CLASS  19— PROVISIONS,  LIGHT  HORSES 

DIVISION  B 

The  judgt's  may  awar.l  Midi  ril)l)(ms,  inrsl,  Sccoiul  (  r  'I'liird,  as  they  deem  to 
he  de>er\'e(L 


No.              No. 

of                of 

Ribbon       Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

iim 

G.  A.  Lord 

i- .  ivyuii 

3(34 

J.  J.   Lynch 

xU.  D.  Lynch- 

365 

Lyiidunville  Creamery  Asso. 

AL    J.    JUirns* 

366 

H.  S.  lAIitchell 

H.  S.  Mitchell 

367 

H.   W.   Aluridiy 

T.    F.   ColYey 

368 

T.  S.   Xewcomb  & 

Co. 

P.    lUancha'-d 

369 

Purdy    Bros. 

S.   Purdy 

370 

F.  J.  Reise 

O.  W.   Kelble 

371 

F.  J.  Reise 

H.    C.    Schromm 

372 

Shattiick  &  Jones 

G.    Hn-hes 

373 

Shattnck  &  Jones 

Jas.    Dcherty 

374 

Shattiick  &  Jones 

(r.   Frerj   Scamon* 

375 

P.   Shea 

M.   J.    Shea 

376 

H.  M.  Smirh 

ifiert    for   Imrlge. 

\A'.   H.   Daley 

*Dri\er  qua 

67 


Established    1841 


E.  B.  BADGER  &  SONS  CO. 

COPPERSMITHS 
...and... 
SHEET   METAL  WORKERS 

NOS.    63    TO    75    PITTS    STREET 
BOSTON 

COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

The  Chelsea  Iron  and 
Coal  Company 


A.G.&M.L 


COMPANY 


FELKIN 

SIGNS 

of       Every       Description 

BRASS    TEAM    SIGNS 
LONG  WHARF.  Foot  of  State  St. 

'rinMK'   ")74    Mail! 


Telephone  401-2,  South   Boston 
M.  J.  SHEA,  Manager 


WILSON      TISUALE      COMPANY 

Old    Colony 
Stable 


WORKING  HORSES   &   WAGONS 
TO     LET     BY     DAY     OR     WEEK 

46  to  54   DORCHESTER  AVENUE 
SOUTH    BOSTON 

F.  D.  WILKINS  &  CO. 

TRUCKMEN    and    FORWARDERS 
51     COMMERCIAL    ST..    BOSTON 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

J.  H.  RICHARDSON 

COSMOPOLITAN     BOARDING 
and  BAITING  STABLE 

Corner    PITTS   and   SOUTH    MARGIN    STS. 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

STOCK   FARM.   A.XDOVER.   MASS. 


CLASS  20— PROVISIONS,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  judi^cs  iiia\-  award  such  ril)l)(in-.  i-"ir--t,  Sccimd  i  ir  Tliird.  a>  the\-  deem  to 
he  deserved 

No.  ivjo.  No. 

of                  of                     OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon        Entry  Horses 

'■ill     'W  D.  llaker  Co.  Jns.    Jerardi  1 

•MS      I'.artlett    Htms.   &   Co.  J.  J.  Donovan*  1 

379  F.    P.leiler  J.    IMeiler  I 

380  Boston  Transfer  Co.  N.  W.  CURRIER-  1 

(See  Veteian  Drivers'  Cla.ss) 

381  Boston  Transfer  Co.  T.  H.  Dicker-  1 

382  Boston  Transfer  Co.  J.  T  Grimes  1 

383  Boston  Transfer  Co.  J.   A.    ^[orlev  1 

384  E.  L.  Chase  T.  J.   AfcDonald  1 

385  Chapin  .^-  Adams     '  W.  S.  ^^'ilson  1 
385a  Clayton   .Market  A.  :McDonald  1 

386  \\'.  A.  Clement  E.    A.    Grant  1 

387  C.  G.  AFullen  J.    J.    Reddmgton  1 

388  H.   A\'.    Murphy  F.    DeCorsey*  2 

389  Rowes"    Wharf   Provision  Co.      J.    Fnscaldo  1 

390  W.  G.  &  H.  C.  Russell  C.  Oliver  1 

391  A\-.  G.  &  H.  C.  Russell  F.  J.  Farreukoph*  1 

392  Schwarzschiid  &  Sulzberger  Co.    Fatk.    A.    Ouinn  2 

393  H.  D.  Smith  H.   D.   Smith  1 

394  John  Wrio-ht  John    Wri-ht  1 


►Driver  qnalifierl    for   badge. 


69 


Bdridge,  Baker  Co. 

WHOLESALE 
GROCERS 


IMPORTERS  AND  JOBBERS 

TEAS 

COFFEES      AND     MOLASSES 

213  and  215  STATE   STREET,   BOSTON 


ALSO    SALEM,    MASS. 


CLOGHER  &  MULRENIN 


GROCER  and  IMPORTERS 


2742-44-46  WASHINGTON  STREET 


Established    1841 

W.  p.  STONE  &  CO. 

Manufacturers   of 

WAGONS,    CARAVANS    AND 

SLEDS 

CARRIAGE    PAINTING 

REPAIRING     IN     ALL    BRANCHES 

175  and  179  WEST  FIRST  STREET 
SOUTH    BOSTON 


Atwood  &  McManus 

^Manufacturers  of  All   Kinds   of 
WOODEN  BOXES 

PACKING  CASES  and 

KINDLING  WOOD 
Telephone  Connection 


Factory   and   Office 
CARTER    ST.    and    FOURTH     ST. 

CHELSEA,   MASS. 

Telephone,    Havmarket    No.?.    491    and   49l' 

C.  BERRY  &  CO. 

Iniiiorters  ami  Whole.sale  Dealers  in 

WINES     and     LIQUORS 

BottU-rs  cif 

LAGER,  ALE  AND  PORTER 

Proprietors  of  Berry's  Diamond  Wedding 
Rye  and   Bourbon   AVhiskey 

84  to  88  LEVERETT  ST.,  and  2  to  8  ASH- 
LAND ST.,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

GEORGE  ADAMS,  Manager 

UNION  STEAM  SPONG- 
ING WORKS 

103     and     105    BEDFORD    STREET, 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  Oxford  90 
Cloth   Sponges  and    Refinishers 

London   Shrunk   Process 


CLASS  21— CONFECTIONERS 

The    |iiili4\'>  iiia\-  award   Mich  ribbons,  First,  Second  i  )r  Third,  as  they  deem  h 


be  deserved 


No.            No,  No. 

of                 of                         OWNER'S     NAME                                                  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry  Horses 

;}!).')  The  Walter  AI.   Lowney  Co.       Thos.  Dunn  1 

aiX]  The  AA'alter  M.   Lowney  Co.       Jos.   Frich  1 

'?/.)-  The  AAalter   Af.   Lowney  Co.       J.    Keefe  1 

8!)S  The  Walter   M.   Lowney  Co.       C.   Lei.t^htzer*  1 

89!)  The  Walter  AI.   Lowney  Co.       C.   Grant  2 

4(H»  d'he   Walter  M.   Lowney  Co.       M.  B.  Patten  2 

401  The  Walter   M.   Lowney  Co.       D.   Sarsfiekl  2 

M)2  McDonald.   'A'eber  Co.                    F.   F.  Wolfe  1 

40:!  McDonald.  Weber  Co.                   J.    Pinorec  2 

404  The   Three    Millers    Co.                 J.  W.   Phipps  1 

405  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               J.  P.  McCall  1 

406  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               H.   L.   Scaife  1 

407  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.                W.  H.   Belt  is  2 

408  N.  E.   Confectionery  Co.               E.  AA'.    Brown  2 

409  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               J.  H.   F.   Aliller  2 

410  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               AA^  T.  Se>-mour  2 

411  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               AAT   E.   Davis  2 

412  N.   E.  Confectionery  Co.               Bartlev  M.  Roe  2 


*Drivei-  qvialified  for 


71 


WHITE    HOUSE ,  £.   J.    BABCOCK 

PURE 

GINGER    ALE 


HAS    NO    EQUAL 

A  sweeping  assertion  that 
may  be  verified  by  trying  it; 
you     will      then      be     convinced. 

STANDARD  BOTTLING  & 
EXTRACT  CO. 

73  HARVARD  ST.,  BOSTON.      Tel.,  Ox.  333 


COMPLIMENTS 


.OF... 


HOTEL  BELLEVUE 


BARTLETT  BROS.  &  CO. 

(•.iiiimissidii    .Merchaiit.s    and    Dealers    in 

BUTTER,  CHEESE,  EGGS  AND 
POULTRY 

7  and  8  NO.   MARKET  ST.,  and  7  CLINTON 
ST.,    BOSTON,    MASS. 

BEST  GR.\DES  A   SPBCL-VLTY 


COAL  and  CHARCOAL 


200  NORFOLK  AVENUE 
ROXBURY 

Telephone.    Roxbury   368. 

TelepliDlie,   ( 'ambiiils'e   X-".. 

PROCTOR  BROTHERS 

Whdlesal,.    ami    Kelail 

GRAIN,       HAY,       STRAW       AND 
FEED 

CRAIGIE'S     BRIDGE,     EAST     CAMBRIDGE 
Importers  of  Peat   Moss 

(ien.   O.    Proctor.    Prop.  K.    R.    Lovell.    .Msr. 

BAIN  BROTHERS  CO. 

WHOLESALE 
GROCERS 

240   MILK   STREET,  BOSTON 


CLASS  22— GROCERS,  SINGLES 

The    |u<lyv>  nia\-  award   Mich  rihhoii.s.  I'irst,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
he  deserved 


No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S     NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribl:on        Entry  Horses 


418  All^erti    Importing-   Co.,    Inc.         11.   Terraceiano 

414  I'.ain    T.ros.   Co.  H.    A.    jerauhl- 

41.")  r.ain    I'.ros.   Co.  F.   ( )Tlrien 

416  C.  :\l.   I'.ixhy  J.  T.  Thonipson 

417  J.  A.  P)Owman  Geo.    Farnam* 

418  Fldridge,  Baker  Co.  T.    F.    Rhines 

419  D.  J.  Keefe   &   Co.  .         L.    ^Torrell 

420  S.   S.   Pierce  Co.  J.   A.   Garland* 

421  S.  S.   Pierce  Co.  Owen    Carrolh^^ 

422  Prelde  .K:  Co.  W.    A\  hite 
428  Shapleigh  Coffee  Co.  \\".    H.    Carter 
424  John  Tahiot  Geo.   Tucker 
42.-)  John  TaU)ot  H.    Karle 
42.5a  John  Talbot  J.  W.   Cook 
42H  F.   P.  Tukev  H.   Tukev 


♦Driver  qualified  for  l);ulge. 


CLASS  23— GROCERS,  DOUBLES 

The  judge.N  may  award  such  rihhons,  l-drst.  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
he  deserved. 

427  P.ain  P.ros.  Co.  J.    A.    Fitzgerald-  2 

428  Fldridge.   P.aker  Co.  E.    E.    G.    Diamond*  2 


GEO.CFOXCO. 


BAKERS 


CHARLESTOWN,  MASS. 


R.  f.  fOlEY  &  CO. 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealeis  in 

OCEAN,       LAKE       AND       RIVER 

FISH 

Cotuit   Oysters   a   Specialty 

213     ELIOT    ST.,         .       .       BOSTON,     MASS. 

Telephone    Orders    Promptly    Attended    To. 

Telephones,  Oxford  510  and  511. 

Telephone  1659-2  Oxford 

CASEY  &  ROTH 

PROVISIONS,    VEGETABLES, 
FRUIT,  ETC. 

Poultry    and    Game 
207  Eliot  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


John    Schwalm 

SUCCESSOR    TO 

David  Myers  &  Co* 

Tailor 

516  and  517  Colonial   Building 

100    BOYLSTON    STREET 

BOSTON 

Telephone  156:'-2   Oxford. 

Compliments  of 
LYNDONVILLE 

CREAMERY 

ASSOCIATION 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co. 

122  W.  FIRST  STREET 
SOUTH    BOSTON 

Wliolesale   Agents   For 

STANDARD     WOOD     CO. 

of  New  York 


GROCERS,  DOUBLES— Continued 


No. 
Of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S 

.     NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

421) 

I'^ldridg-e,    Ha 

ker  Co. 

Wm.    Stev^-art^^ 

2 

4:!0 

Wm.    S.   Hil 

s   Co. 

T.    F.    Connors 

2 

431 

r.   i'astcnc   6 

c  Co.,   inc. 

.\.   Serino 

2 

432 

P.   Pastene  &  Co.,  inc. 

J.    B.    BasbO 

2 

433 

Scandinavia-,1 

Imp   Co. 

A.   R.   Perry 

2 

434 

S.  S.   Pierce 

Co. 

Clarence    H.    Jones='= 

(See  Veteran  Diivers'  Clas.s) 

2 

435 

S.   S.   Pierce 

Co. 

J.   A^^    ^Finrphy* 

2 

436 

S.  S.  Pierce 

Co. 

L.    C.    LouL^hman* 

2 

437 

John  Talbot 

H.   Tncker 

2 

438 

C.  B.  Smith 

&  Bro. 

M.    :\rcLauQ-hlin 

2 

439 

C.  B.  Smith 

&  Bro. 

G.    P>ro\vnell 

2 

440 

C.  B.  Smith 

&  Bro. 

^^r.    ^IcCTreevey 

2 

441 

C.  B.  Smith 

&  Bro. 

jM.    Knowles 

3 

442 

C.   B.  Smith 

&  Bro. 

Jas.    DeConsey 

3 

443 

C.   B.  Smith 

lifled    for    badge. 

&  Bro. 

A.    B.    Lei^hton 

3 

*Dr 

CLASS  24—GROCERS\  FOURS 

The  Jn<li;es  may  award  snch  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


444  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

445  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

446  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

447  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

448  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

*Di'iver  qiinlifierl  for   bads:?. 


T.  Driscolb'^ 

4 

D.    J.    Sinoleton* 

4 

David  Bennett 

4 

P.   Donohue''' 

4 

A.  L.  Goodrich 

4 

BAY  STATE  FUEL  COMPANY 

A   Consolidation   of  the  Old    Firm    of   RICHARDSON    &    BACON    with    BA  KE  R- H  U  NN  E  WE  LL  CO 

COAL  AND  WOOD 


GENEFfAL  OFFICE   AND   WHARVES 

157  MAIN  STREET,  CAMBRIDGE 


Branch  Office  in  Boston        :        :        :       127  CAMBRIDGE   STREET 

Branch  Offices  in  Cambridge 

624  Mass.  Ave.,      Central  Street  1336  Mass.  Ave.,         Harvard  Square 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


London  Harness  Company 

JOHN   HANCOCK   BUILDING 
176  Devonshire  and  27  to  29  Federal  Streets 


CLASS  25— BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS,  SINGLES 

Tlie  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  l< 
be  deserved. 


No. 

No. 

No. 

of 

iO 

OWNER 

i-. 

NAME 

DRIVER'S 

NAME 

of 

R 

ibbon 

Entry 

Horses 

449  A.  Berkman  A.   Rosenberg- 
47)0  C.   r.erry  &  Co.  J.  J.   Cotter 
451  C.    I5erry  &  Co.  W.  W.    IJ.M-ns* 
4r)la  .M.    r.ronstem  F.    .\l.    .\ndleman 
4r)2  r)..herly  .^   Daly  E.    J.    Ro.ian 

453  Doherty  &   Daly  J.  H.   Doherty- 

454  W.  J.  Higgins  &  Co.  D.   F.   Lally- 

455  W.  J.    Higgins  &  Co.  F.    J.    Higgins* 
45(5  juhn    ^[cDonald  J.  J.   Px.nshell 

457  F.  J.   ^IcCarthy  &  Co.  M.  H.   llurke 

458  John   Miller  &  Co.  M.    McParUand 

450  Xobscot    .Mount    Spring   Co.         T.  F.  Alulcady 
460  S.   G.  Parker  Co.  G.    F.    Reid 
4«il  Star   Brewing  Co.  P.    Maguire 
462  Stillman    Pottling  Co.  L.    E])stein 
46.S  Stillman -Pottling  Co.  F.   LevcnsMi 

464  Stillman    P.ottling  Co.  D.    Pearlman 

465  Stillman    Pottling  Co.  J.   Rocco* 

466  Stillman   P.ottling  Co.  M.    Prestin* 

471a  e"]ias.   S.   (i<.ve   Co.  J.  p..\vsh*-ll 

471b  C.   H.    Fallv  T.  P.  Cheever- 


♦Driver  qiialified  for   Ijadge. 


77 


THE 


ROESSLE  BREWERY 


PREMIUM  LAGER   BEER 

IN    WOOD    OR    BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  lyol'R  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  highesl  type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Quality,  Age.  Sub- 
stance. Purity  and   Arcinia,  and  is   Absdlute   Perfection. 

ESTABLISHED    1846 


OFFICE,    BREWERY    AND    BOTTLING    DEPARTMENT 


1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE 


BOSTON 


SAFETY     BARREL 


N. 


1  ,     'i 


iiiL 


Pat.  March  28,   1893 

r,uy  th.'  ■•.^AFETV 

i  A  .'^  H       liARRKL." 

/^      niMilc-  lit'  \ei-\-  heavy 

■  /         sii'cl.     witli     heavy 

I  s  i  11  K  1  f'    !■  i  li  b  e  d 

Siuirds.  if  ymi  want 

j  a     barrel     that     will 

outlasi     any     oth-r 

made. 


m 


DOVER     STAMPING     &     MFG.    COMPANY 


J.  S.  Newccmb 


G.  M.  Legg 


J.  S.  Newcomb  &  Go. 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 
BEEF,    MUTTON.    LAMB.    VEAL 

AND    POULTRY 

Basement,  4  Quincy  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 

Tele])hune,   Uichninnd   220 


Established    1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

HAMMERED    IRON    and 
STEEL 

Office    and    Works    at 

340    Maverick   Street,    East    Boston 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

A.    S.    Smith.    Pres. 
Thos.    L.    Di.:nbar,    Treas. 
Thos.    Copeland,    Supt. 
W.    C.    Smith.   Asst.    Supt. 


"PLEASANT      VALLEY"      PRINT 
BUTTER 

Used  by  people  who  appreciate 
"QUALITY." 

Ask   Your    Grocer. 

CHAPIN  &  ADAMS  COMPANY 

204  State  Street.  Boston 

Wholesale  nistril)ntors. 


CLASS  26— BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS,  DOUBLES 

The  juds^X'^  nia\   award  such  rihl^Jiis,  iMrst.  Sc'CmihI  >  h.-  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  (leserve(h 


No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S     NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry  Horses 

4(;7  r.    I'.erry  .K:  Cu. 

468  Joseph   (iahm  &  Son 

469  Joseph  Gahni   &  Son 

470  Joseph  ( ;ahni  &  Son 

471  Joseph   Gahm  &  Son 

472  John  ^Filler  &  Co. 
47.':!  S.   G.   Parker  Co. 
474  S.  Cr.  I'arker  Co. 


476  Star  r)re\\ing'  Co. 

477  Star  IJrewing  Co. 
47S  Star  Brewing  Co. 

479  Star  Rrewing  Co. 

480  Star  P.rewino-  Co. 

481  Star  T.rewino-  Co. 

482  Star  Brewing  Co. 

483  Star  Brewing  Co. 

484  Star  Brewing  Co. 

*Driver  qualified  for   liadij^-. 


J.   J.    Afurphy-5= 

2 

H.   F.  Cowell 

2 

C.    W.    Melendy 

2 

F.    C.    Thomas 

2 

:\r.   J.  Anglin* 

2 

D.  L.  Sullivan 

2 

P.   J.    Bushell 

2 

F.    S.    York 

2 

A.    L.    PERRY 

2 

(  See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

X.   Grealy 

2 

J.   O'Brien 

2 

Thos.    Griffin 

2 

T.    McCartley 

2 

Peter    Clashy 

2 

Thos.   Comer* 

2 

C.    Crowdey 

2 

J.    McXeill 

2 

J.    A.    Morehouse 

2 

70 


JOHN  H.  SULLIVAN 

General  Contractor 

LAKE  STREET 

Cor.  Commonwealth  Avenue 
Telephone,  147  Brighton 

COMPLIMENTS    OF 

JOHN     A.     BRADFORD 

COAL   COMPANY 


Maiden  Coal  Co. 

228       PLEASANT       STREET 
Telephone,     494     and     495 


Telephone   Haymarket   1655   &   1656. 

W.6.y.C.RUM 

Dealers  in 
PROVISIONS,   FRUIT,   VEGE- 
TABLES, ETC. 
Butter.  Eggs  and  Game 
High   Grade   Goods   a   Specialty 
:39  Portland  Street,  Boston 


OF  EVERY  KIND. 

I  m  plements.        ^^^^^ 
I^achines.  ^^^ 
Woodenware. 


TELEPHONE 
RICnMOND  1660 


IINCOHPOBATED) 

SI  AND  S2    NORTH  MARKELT  STREET.  BOSTON. 


JTuumLvh  GS'  ^ ifipro  I'OfI  J:,"mp/o} '<?«j-. 
Mercantile,  ^^ricultural.  JlorficuUtiral. 

TEIJ^PHOVT-;    HlCll.    Ib60 


ELM     FARM     MILK     COMPANY 

PURE    MILK    AND   CREAM 
Wales  Place  Dorchester,  Mass. 

Telephone  'l\<w  Dorchester 
We  make  a  specially  of  family  trade.  The 
dairies  in  which  our  milk  is  produced  are 
under  the  examination  of  our  own  in- 
spectors. The  cows  are  clean,  the  stables 
whitewashed  and  well  lighted,  the  milk  is 
liromptly  cooled  and  shipped  by  express 
trains  in   refri levator  cars. 

Telephone,  Dorchester  796-1 


DORCHESTER   ICE 
COMPANY 

DORCHESTER 

W.  M.   ROBINSON 

^  ^  ^ 
HAY,    GRAIN     and 

POULTRY     FOOD 

-f    '♦'    4- 
ADAMS     AND     PARK     STREETS 

DORCHESTER 


80 


CLASS  27— FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  rihbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME 


Ribbon      Entry  Horses 

485  Jas.  R.Jones                                       W.Miner  1 

486  Jas.  R.  Jones                                     A.  J.   Green  1 

487  \\m.   J.   Mcintosh                          \M   E.   Gallagher  1 

488  Thos.   ^IcDowell                              J.    Bronkhorst  1 

489  Seaverns    Piano    Action  Co.        F.   R.  Cusb.ing*  1 


♦Driver  qualified  for    badge. 


CLASS  28— MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  ma}-  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deservecL 


490  E.  J.  Ball 

491  Louis   Bierweiler 

492  Boston   Bundle   Wood   Co. 

493  Boston  Flev.  Ry.  Co. 

494  Boston  Ele\'.  Ry.  Co. 

495  W.  S.  Bur-l)ank  Co. 

496  W.  S.  Burbank  Co. 

497  E.    R.    Flint    Xai)tha   Cleans- 

ing Co. 

498  B.  F.  Keith 

499  J.  A.  McAuley 

500  The   Park   Pollard   Co. 


•Driver  qualified  for    baflg-f. 

81 


A.    \\.    l'enil)r<;»ke* 

1 

B.   L.   Bierweiler 

1 

R.  D.   Landers 

2 

John    O'Connor* 

1 

J.    E.   Dempsey* 

1 

G.  H.  Green 

1 

T.  J.    Malciie.  J/. 

2 

E.  J.  Gould 

1 

Ml  J.   Flynn* 

1 

J.   J.    Sullivan* 

1 

T.    F.   Cook* 

2 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

I'ZSTABI.TSHED    1850 

128  FANEUIL  HALL 
MARKET 


TELEPHONE 


?KENNEY«l^»ffERBlIRy(bMPANY 


WisaSvl..,^ostoi\.Mass.4 


>ii,d0 


Telephone  Connection.     Geo.  .1.  Elder,  Prop.      | 

R.  J.  ELDER 
TRUCKMAN 

and 

FORWARDER 

116  BORDER  STREET 

EAST  BOSTON 

Boston  Office 

Corner   Summer   and   Devonshire   Sts. 

Moving  of  Heavy  Machinery  a  Specialty 

EXPRESS 

Leaves  East  Boston   Mornings.     Returns   at 

Noon. 

Leaves  East  Boston  2  ]).  ni.    Returns  at  .">  p.  ni. 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

The 
Pureoxia 

Co. 


MISCELLANEOUS  -Continued 


No.            No.  No. 

of                 of                                  OWNER'S    NAME                                           DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon        Entr-y  Horses 

501  Standard  Oil  Co.  M.  DICKIE-  2 

(.-!eH  WHcrau  Drivers'  Class) 

502  Standard  Oi!   Co.  J.  T.  Stewart='=  2 
502a  Standard  Oil  C<i.  A.  J.  (ioddard  3 

503  Tide   Waaler  Oil   Co.   of  Mass.  R.  C.   Beard  2 

504  White  &  Leahy  AA'.   P.   Leahy  1 

505  White  &  Leahy  V\ .    O'Brien*  1 
50fi     AVhite  &  Leahy  E.  S.    Bartiett  1 


^Driver  qualified  for   badg-e. 


CLASS  29— MANUFACTURERS',  SINGLES 

The  Judi^es  ma\-  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


507  Boston  Foi-og  Co.  John   Thomas 

508  The   Carters   Ink   Co.  AW  Roach 

509  The  Carters  Lik  Co.  P.   O'Brien* 

510  The  Carters  Ink  Co.  Jas.   Fitzoerald 

511  The  Carters   Ink  Co.  C.   Whyte 

512  The  Carters   Ink   Co.  W.    Kenney* 

513  James  Holland  H.   liateman* 
513a  Hnnt-S]nller   .Alanf^-.  Corp.  R.   OTJrien 

514  McKenney  8c  AA'aterbnry  J.   C.   Reid'-' 

515  McKenncy  cK:  AAaterbury  R.    R.    Reid 

516  N.    E.    r.ed<lino-   Co.  S.    J.    Cashman* 

517  Thos.  Cx.  Plant  Co.  J.   H.    Calvin* 

518  Union    Glass    Co.  J.  J.   Bradv- 

519  AValworth   Mfg-.   Co.  C.    [1.    Rautenbero* 

520  AValworth   lATfo-.  Co.  J.   Barry.   Xo.  2 

521  The  J.   I'..  AAilliams  Co.  A.   Purnsid" 


"Driver  qualified  for    hadgt 


J.      L.      RICHARDS 
President 


H.      C.      FRENCH 
Treasurer 


Compliments  of  the 


CHELSEA  GAS  LIGHT  COMPANY 


8  EVERETT  AVENUE,  CHELSEA.  MASS. 


JOSEPH      M.     RILEY 
Asst.   Gen.    Manager 


REVERE  HOUSE 


BOWDOIN    SQUARE 
BOSTON. 


R.   S.   HARRISOX.   P 


Compliments    of 

The 
TRIMOUNT 

LAUNDRY 


G.  W.  &  f.  SMITH  IRON  COMPANY 

STRUCTURAL        STEEL 
AND    ARCHITECTURAL 

IRON     WORK 

OFFICIOS.    Sllol'.'^    .\XI>    I'"(  uxi  ii;v. 

Island.    Gerard.     Farnham     and     Reading 
Sts., 

BOSTON,     MASS..     U.     S.     A. 


Compliments  of 

THE  HUNT-SPILLEH 
MFG.  CORPORATIO 

84 


CLASS  30— MANUFACTURERS,  DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD 


The  Judge: 
be  deserved. 


IS,  First,  Sc 


i>r  Third  as  they  deem  t( 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entty 


OWNER'S     NAME 


No. 
DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Horses 


522  Atwood  &  McManns 

523  Atwood  &  McJManus 

524  Atwood  &  McManus 

525  Atwood  &  McManus 

526  Atwood  &  McManus 

527  Atwood  &  McManus 

528  Atwood  &  McManus 

529  Atwood  &  McManus 

530  Atwood  &  Alc^Ianus 

531  Boston  Forg-e  Co. 

532  The  Carters  Ink  Co. 

533  John    A.    Dunn    Co. 

534  Ginn    &    Co. 

535  Thos.   G.   Plant  Co. 

536  Thos.  G.  Plant  Co, 

537  Thos.   G.   P^ant  Co. 

538  Thos.  G.  P^ant  Co. 

539  AVal worth   Mfg.  Co. 

540  AVal  worth   Mfg.  Co. 

541  Walworth   Affg.      Co. 

542  A\'alworth  :^[fg.  Co. 

543  AA'al worth   Mfg.  Co. 

544  A\'al worth   Alfg.   Co. 

545  ^^^alworth   ^Ifg.  Co. 


J.   Luzzatto*  2 

Thos.   Barrett*  2 

E.  W.  Riley  2 
J.  J.  Cronin*  2 
Edgar  Bryson='=  2 
J.  Cami)hell-  2 
Oliver  H.  Marion-  2 
W.    H.    Bryson*  2 

F.  W.  Hoey  2 
W.    B.    SMITH  2 

(.Sen  ^'eteran  Drivers'  Class) 

C.   M.   A  hern*  2 

E.  X.  Keith  2 

R.    J.    Reid=-  3 

Thos.    Carlcy  2 

J.  J.    Griffin*  2 

R.   Brinkert*  2 

T.   J.   Harrington*  2 

Andrew    Johnson*  2 

J.    T.    Geary  2 

T.    .A. h earn  2 

Jas.   Barry.  No.  1  2 

M.  O'Xeik-  2 
William    IKnrv  Glancy*       6 

Tohn    Ahearn  6 


♦Drivpr  qxialifieri  fnr   luTfljre. 


C    Brigham    Company 


WIK  )LI':SALI':  AXD  RETAIL  DEALERS  IX 


Milk^  Cream  and  Butter 


158  Massachusetts  Avenue 


CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 


Telephones,  262  and  263  Cambridge. 


Seaverns   Piano 
Action  Co. 

CAMBRIDGE,    MASS. 

Doherty  &  Daly 

Succes.'^ors  to  John   Campbell 
Bottlers  of 

Mineral  Waters,  Tonics,  etc. 

Soda  Fountains   a   Specialty, 
40-42  ONEIDA  ST.,  BOSTON,  Mass. 

Tel.    1487-1    Tremont 


J.  P.  Lawrence  &  Co. 

30    Quincy    Market,    Boston.    Mass. 

J.  P.  Lawrence  F.  B.  Eastman 

PHONE    RICHMOND    919 

Wholesale    and    Retail    Dealers    in 

Poultry  and  Game 

GOODS    FOR    SHIPPING    A    SPECIALTY. 
Wholesale   Department,   32  NO.  MARKET  ST 

IMPORTERS  OF  FOREIGN  GAME. 


TELEPHONE,    469    ROXBURY 

Dr.  James   F.  Hanley 

Veterinarian 


1456   TREMONT    STREET 
ROXBURY.    MASS. 


86 


CLASS  31-BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIALS 

The  jniii;L>  may  award  Mich  ril)l)ons,  First,  Second  n-  Third  as  llicv  deem  U 
he  lle^er\•ed. 


No.  No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S.     NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry  Horses 

r)4(i  'idle   Atlantic    Works  ]■.    W.    Eldred-e* 

:)47  idle  Atlantic  A\'urks  W.   T.   l)unl)ar- 

548  The   I'.rdckway-Smith  Corp.  F.   ().    Doi.i-hty 

")4!>  ddie    llrockway-Smith   Corp.  C.    X.    W'aitte''' 

•"i:)!.)  CJ.  H.  Delanos"  Sons  O.   H.    Delano 

531  E.    Dennett    &   Son  C.  W.  Deimett 

552  \.   I'd-eednian   &  Co.  C.    Dcllano 

o'Vi  I.    I'd-eedniari  (.K:  Co.  E.    lloyle 

554  \.  Freednian   &  Co.  Tim   Dwyer 

555  \.  I'T-eedman   &  Co.  ]\I.   T.    Folger* 
55B  J.  A.  Ginty  J.    A\Tieeler 

557  ]\L  Goldstein  A.   Ahdmavtz 

558  Arthur  C.   Harvey  Co.  A.    (i.  Templeton"^ 

559  L.   \.   Leit^-hton  A\'.    L.    Xevvconib* 

560  Jas.  P.  ^lackey  C.    A.    Kenrick 

561  The  Morss  v^:   W  hyte  Co.  A\'.    F.   Campbell* 

562  The  Mt.rss  «^-  Wdiyte  Co,  T.   S.   GrifHrhs* 
568  Pierce  &  Cox  E.    Eisner-^' 

564  Pierce  (^  Cox  R.   Eisner 

565  Arthur  T.  Purdy  A.   T.    Purdv 
565a  G.  A\'.  &:  F.  Smith   Iron  Co.  A.    McKennon  2 
565b  G.  AA'.  &  F.  Smith  Iron  Co.  j.   R.   .Xver'-*                             4 


•Driver  qualifiefl  for   l.a<lse. 


Snow,    Wheeler,    McElveen    and 
Cavanagh  Horse  Co. 

COHBINATION  SALE  STABLE 


Ikiyers  will  find  constantly  on  hand  a  large  assortment  of  every  class  of 
horse  at  lowest  prices. 

Ivegular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday-  at  Combination  Sale 
Stables  at  lo  o'clock  a.  m. 

All  horses  warranted  as  represented  or  mone}-  refunded. 

Accommodations  for  over  300  horses. 

243  and  245  Friend  St.,  Boston 


Near  Xorlh  I'uion  Statinu 


l\-]ei)h()ne.   ^o;  Havmarket 


INCORPORATED  W    •       %J  •         J.    A.lV3VJlill3 


PROVISIONS 

WHOLESALE    AND    RETAIL 

2,  4,  6  and  8  Fancuil  Hall  Market,  Boston 

Telephone.    ITiio  Kichmond 
F.    W.    Dyer.    Pres.    and    Treas. 
G.   A.  Hall.  Vice-Pres. 

J.    E.    Hyland,    Asst.    Treas. 


P.    O.    Box    1284. 


Telephone,    1065    Rich. 


D.   5.   WOODBURY 

Forwarder 

Eastern  Steamship  Co, 

Portland  Division 

326   Commercial  St.,    Boston 

Opposite    Union    Wharf 

BAGGAGi':    TnAXsi'-i:Km;i)   to    alt. 

POINTS. 


IMPORTERS    AND 
GROCERS 

128-134  EMERSON   STREET, 
South   Boston 


G.    B.    HOWARD 


M.    ]>.     CKI':SSV 


G.  B.  HOWARD  &  CO 
TEAMSTERS 


AND    FORWARDERS 


Clinton   Market,   Boston,   Mass. 


88 


CLASS  32— METALS  AND  JUNK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  rihl)(in>.  First.  Secoud  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
l)e  deserved. 


No.  No. 

of  of  OWNER'S     NAME 

Ribbon        Entry 


566  E.  B.  Badger  &  Sons  Co. 

567  E.   B.    r.adger  &  Sons  Co. 

568  D.   F.   Healey 

569  lAF   R.  Segall 

570  Dover  Stamping  &  ^Ifg.  Co. 

571  Dover  Stamping  &  Mig.  Co. 

572  Dover  Stam;)ing  &  Mfg.  Co. 

*Dri\-er  qualified  for   badge. 


DRIVERS    NAME 

No. 

of 

Hot-ses 

D. 

J.   Faley 

1 

AI' 

Twomey* 

2 

D. 

F.   Healey 

1 

P. 

Sine 

1 

J- 

F.    Collins 

1 

J. 

H.   Farrell 

1 

D. 

F.   ColHns 

2 

CLASS  33— HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The  Judges  ma}-  award  such  ribhons.  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


573 

H.  P.  AFcLaughlin 

&Co. 

A\'.  D.  AV.  Avery 

1 

574 

H.  P.  AicLaughlin 

&Co. 

J.    Julianno 

2 

575 

Fulton  O'Brion 

C.    Jesson 

1 

576 

Fulton  O'Brion 

D.    Smiddy=' 

1 

577 

Fulton  0"Brion 

E.    J.    Alurphy* 

0 

578 

Fulton  OTlrion 

P.    Kelly 

2 

579 

Shei^ard  .^-  Hardy 

A\'.    J.    Keene 

1 

580 

A\'.  P.  Whittemore 

Co. 

]nhn   Burke- 

1 

581 

A\'.  P.  A\'hittemore 

Co. 

TiuK^thy  Corrigan 

1 

♦Driver  qualified  for   bad^e. 

89 


w.  p.  WHrrraioRE 

HAY  AND  GRAIN 


If   you   anticipate   moving  to    Revere 
or     Winthrop,     do     not     forget     the 

SUBURBAN    GAS  &   ELEC= 
TRIG  CO. 

which    suppHes    electricity    for    light 
and  power  and  gas  for  lighting,  heat- 
ing and  cooking. 

SUBURBAN  GAS  &  ELECTRIC  CO- 

REVERE  AND  WINTHROP 


Telephone    Connection.  Established     1899 

WEBSTER  CHARCOAL  CO. 

J.    J.    O'BRIEN 

Wholesale   Dealer    in 

Best  Hardwood  Charcoal 


Office,  36  WEBSTER  AVE., 
CAMBRIDGE       :       :        :         MASS. 


its  Hnra,-,.     W, 


Henry    Crafts'    Sons 

Siiccessor    to    Crafts   &    Ward 
Establi-shed    ISJ:.. 

Coal,  Bricks,  Lime,  Cement 

CRAFTS'    WHARF 

266    to    274     Albany    Street.     Boston 

Telei)hone.     Treniont    V-O. 


C.  BUTLER  &  CO. 


TRUCKMEN 

AND 

FORWARDERS 


245  Purchase  St.,   Boston 


TELEPHONE.     724     MAIN 


90 


CLASS  33— HAY  AND  GRAIN— Continued 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entry 


OWNER'S     NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Horses 


r)S2  W.  r.  WliiUeniore  Co. 

r)8;;  W.  l '.  Wlullcinore  Co. 

584  W.  V.  AAhitlcMiiurc  Co. 

585  AY.  r.  AA'hittemore  Co. 

586  A\'.  V.  WhiUemoreCo. 

587  A\'.  r.  A\'hittemore  Co. 

588  W.  P.  Whittemore  Co. 

589  W.  P.  AA'hittemoreCo. 


Patrick    Gorniley'''  1 

John   Adams  2 

Patrick    Cleary*  2 

Duncan    Ctisack"  2 
Bartholomew    Donavan*      2 

AA'^m.  Craham*  2 

Geo.    P.leakney  3 

Edward   Conroy  -4 


*Dr!ver  qualified  for   badge. 


CLASS  34— LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  ur  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


.)!)()  Jos.   L.   Barry 

591  Jos.   L.  Barry 

592  Curtis  &  Pope  Lumber  Co. 
503  Curtis  &  I'ope  Lumber  Co. 

594  Curtis  &  Pope  Lumber  Co. 

595  Curtis  &  1 ';  ipe  Lumber  Co. 

596  Curtis  &  Piipe  Lumber  Co. 

597  John    Plo^ard 

598  Literstate  Lumber  Co. 

599  Literstatc  Lumber  Co. 

■Driver  qualified  for   liadge. 


J.  E.  Hanion- 

1 

J.  T.   Hennessey 

1 

T.   Goode 

1 

T.   H.   HICKS- 

(Set,  A'eteran   Drivt^s'   C 

1 

'las?) 

Herl)ert   Hall 

2 

Fred    AIor,^-c 

2 

ANDREW  J.    MELDON   2 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'   Cla.ssi 


John   Howard 
AA\   C.   Ak^Cuish 
C.   E.   Simons 


94 


The  Ribbons,  Prize  Rosettes 

Medals,    Metal    Horse   Shields,    Etc. 

Awarded   by  the   Boston   Work=Horse  Parade  Association 
are  made  by 

Boston  Badge 
Company 


629  Old  South  Building  Boston 

A.  J.   BERGE,  Representing 


M.    Frediani    &    Sons 

Wholesale  Dealers  in 

FINE  CONFECTIONERY 

AND    SALTED   NUTS 
2200    Washington    St.,    Roxbury 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

TRUCKMAN 

155   FEDERAL    ST,    Boston,     Mass. 

Telephone.   ISIaiii    :^i:il-:'.. 


E.  S.  HARRIS 

TRUCKMAN 

Forwarder   of   A[erchandise   of  all 

Descriptions    and    General 

Jobbin,? 

offiop: 

204    SOUTH    STREET,       BOSTON 


Compliments  of  a 
Friend 


92 


CLASS  34— LUMBER— Continued 


No.            No.  No. 

of                  of                                  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon       Entry  Horses 

tiOO  (".eo.  H.  Jennings  Warren    A.    Belden='=  1 

GOl  Pope  &  Cottle  J.    D.    Riley  1 

(502  John    M.   Woods    &  Co.            Nyron   R.   Merrifield*  2 

(Sr,-  Veteran   Drivers'   Class  i 


♦Driver  qualified  for   badge. 


CLASS  35— ICE 

The  Jtulges  ma}-  award  snch  ribbons.  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

(jo;-5 

Boston    Dairy   Ice   Co. 

B.   F.   Hariiord 

2 

604 

The  Boston  Ice  Co. 

\\'.    Camlan 

2 

605 

The  Boston  Ice  Co. 

John    McLaughlin 

2 

606 

The  Fells  Ice  Co. 

Guilford    D.    Saunders"^' 

2 

607 

rer  qua] 

D.   C.   Fletcher 

ified  for    badge. 

A.    P.   Fletcher 

2 

*Dri^ 

EUGENE  S.  MORSE 


DON'T  >SUrFERWITH 


DF.ALER   IX 


COAL 

199  MEDfORD  ST.,  BOSTON 

Opposite   Everett   St. 
CHARLESTOWN  DISTRICT 


Telephone 


Charlestown   136 


WINDOW    SHADES 

MADE  TO  ORDER 

THE    HOYT   COMPANY 

347  Broadway,  So.  Boston 

443   Broadway,   So.    Boston 

1246    Dorchester   Ave.,   Dor. 
ESTIMATES  FURNISHED 


Telephone,    112    Sou:h    Boston 

Boston   Flag   Pole  Co. 

Dral.-is    in 

Spruce  and  Cedar  Poles 

SPARS.       TENT,       FLAG,       PIKE      AND 

BEAN     POLES,     AND     POLES     FOR 

RUSTIC     FENCES 


169  Broadway  Extension,  So.  Boston 

No;ir    Dnrcliester    Ave. 


THE,  DAMagng  RATS 


YOUNG'S   RAT   DESTROYER 

Will  rid  your  premises  oi  Rats 
Your    money    back    if    it    fails 

THE  PARK  &  POLLARD  CO. 

46  CANAL  STREET, 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


FRANK  M,  BABCOCK 
Teamster     and 
Forwarding  Agent 

Office,    7    WATER    STREET, 

BOSTON. 

Room  306  Tel.  4184-2  Main 

VETERINARY    X-ZALIA 

Ik-al-  the  ne-->li  <'f  Animals  as  quickly 
as    Kl'-CULAR   X-ZALIA. 

Ilcal>  the  flfsh  of  man.  and  therefore 
we  stronoh-  recommend  its  use  for 
scratclu's,  ,^-alls,  speedcracks.  etc. 

Send  $1.00  for  Large  Bottle  and  Di- 
rections for  using   to 

X-ZALIA   CORPORATION 

57  Batterymarch  Street        :       Boston 


!)f 


CLASS  36— COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  jii(l-c-s  ina_\   award  .sucli  ril)l).)iis.  First,  Second  ny  d'liird,  as  they  deem  t( 
Ie>er\ed. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No, 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S     NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

(iOS 

E.J.  llal.c.-ck 

P.   Poggi 

()0!) 

K.J.  i;al)cock 

Jos.  Dwycr" 

610 

1-:.  J.  Ilabcock 

C.   C.   PhilDi-ook 

(311 

K.J.  I'.abcock 

E.    J.    Hynes 

612 

k:.  J.  I'.abcock 

J.   A.    Leach* 

613 

E.J.  ];al)cock 

J.  A.   A¥atson* 

6U 

-E.  J.  ]]abcock 

Erank  VA^right^'^ 

(iir> 

E.  J.  P.abcock 

F.   AT.   AlcCinley 

616 

E.  J.  r'.al)c.  '.ck 

J.    Henderson 

617 

E.  I.  I'.abo.ck 

J.  W.  Doherty 

618 

J..\.  Eiitz 

J.   A.    Lutz 

610 

A\'el)ster  Charcoa 

dCo. 

H.    ^lartell- 

62(  > 

Webster  Charcoal  Co. 

P.   J.   Tobin* 

621 

\\'el)ster  Charcoa 

dCo. 

J.  J.   Tobin 

622 

A\'el)ster  Charcoal  Co, 

A\'.   E.   Hi--ins* 

623 

John  Woods 

C.   Daly 

624 

John  AA^oods 

T.   P.rennan 

625 

John  AVoods 

ififd   for   badsre. 

Geo.   l\Tnrray 

2 

*Di- 

iver  rninl 

CLASS  37— COAL  SINGLES 

DIVISION  A 

The  Jiulges  may  award  Mich  ril)l)uii>.  Imtsi.  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No.             No. 
of               of 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 
of 

Ribbon       Entry 

Horses 

626 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

l\  Hanson 

627 

Boston  Coal  Co. 

J.    Fitzgibbons 

628 

Boston  Industrial  Home.  Inc. 

J.  Anderson^ 

629 

Boston  Industrial  Home,  Inc. 

J.  Gibson* 

630 

John  A.  Bradford  Coal  Co. 

J.  Arnold 

631 

John  A.  Bradford  Coal  Co. 

Edw.  P.  Byrnes 

632 

Carstein  Coal  Co. 

J.   J,   Devine 

633 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

B.   Portnoi* 

634 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

S.    Dillon 

635 

Chelsea  IrMi  &  Coal  Co. 

M.    Connell 

636 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

A.   Pass 

637 

Paul  Coblenzcr 

F.  Jackson 

638 

Henry  Crafts'  Sons 

F.  Mahoney 

639 

Henry  Crafts'  Sons 

F.  J.  McCarthy* 

640 

Henry  Crafts'  Sons 

P.   McINTYRE 

(Sea  Veteran  Drivers' 

Class) 

641 

IMartin  Gilbert 

J.  Driscoll 

642 

^lartin  Gilbert 

ified  for   bndge. 

J.  Sullivan 

*E>river  qual 

06 


CLASS  37— COAL  SINGLES 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


643 
6U 
645 
646 
647 
648 
649 
650 
651 
652 
653 
654 
655 
656 

657 
658 


-Martin  Godwin  T.    Hawkins 

Austin  Gove  &  Son,  Inc.  J.  Burke 

Austin  Gove  &  Son,  Inc.  R.  Austin 

Morris    Greenburg  Morris   Greenburg 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co.  J.    O'Neil* 

]\Ietropolitan  Coal  Co.  G.  W.   Daiton 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co.  T.   E.   Grady* 

Xeponset  River  Coal  Co.  A.    Pickett 

Xeponset  River  Coal  Co.  J.    Lyons 

Xeponset  River  Coal  Co.  Arthur  Carlew 

A\'.  H.  Pevear  &  Co.  M.  Muse 
Rescue  ^lis.  Wood  &  Coal  Yd    Geo.   Kennedy 
Rescue  Mis.  Wood  &  Coal  Yd   W.    Wilson 


The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 
J.  T.  Tighe  Co. 


J.   F.   CONNORS 

(See  Veteran  Drivers'  Class) 

T.   Mc Govern* 
P.   Donovan 


•Driver  qualified  f<: 


07 


CLASS  38— COAL  DOUBLES 

DIVISION    A. 

'I'hc  Jii(l<;cs  may  award  .Midi  ribbons,  iMrst.  Srcond  ,;■■  Tbird  as  they 
be  (lcser\e(i. 


:lccin  U 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

(;:>!) 

Hatcbebbji-  Bros. 

J.].  ACaddtn 

2 

(iiiii 

llalcbcbkT  liros. 

• 

J.  b\  Keyan 

2 

661 

I'.atcbcblcT  llros. 

A.-E.   St.irknian- 

2 

662 

I'.alclieUbjr  J5ros. 

G.    W.    W  liite 

2 

66;i 

r.nslon    C')al   Co. 

Edw.    ilurlce" 

2 

664 

jobii  A.  liradford  Coal  Co. 

S.    1-^raizer 

2 

6{)0 

John  A.  r.radford  C( 

jal  Co. 

J.'hn     I'.aker 

2 

666 

John  A.  J'.vadford  C( 

)al  Co. 

john    (iatky 

2 

667 

Chelsea    Iron    &   C 

Dal    Co. 

C.    Maeheer 

2 

668 

Henry  Crafts'  Sons 

Thoii.    Afal oney* 

2 

669 

Henry  Crafts'  Sons 

M.    Maloney- 

2 

670 

I'anl  (i.  Coblenzer 

D.    Shine 

2 

671 

Maiden   Coal  Co. 

M.   r..   Slend 

2 

672 

J.    A.    Marsh    Coal 

Co. 

A.    i;.    McKini 

2 

*Di 

i\-er  (|u;i 

ified   for   badse. 

DIVISION  B 

The   Indices  nia_\-  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  thev  deem  t* 
be  deserved. 


67:-!  MetroDoliian  Coal  Co. 

674  Metroi)ol,ian  Coal  Co. 

67."'.  Metroi)(.bl;'n  Coal  Co. 

*Drivoi-  f|iialifir,]    for    ha.lse. 


T.oii's  C(^'i>by^^ 
C.  A^'.  M'lckie^ 
M.    T.    Critfin^^^ 


i)8 


COAL  DOUBLES— Division  B— Continued 


No. 


No. 


of  o*  OWNER'S    NAME  DRIVER'S    NAME  of 

Ribbon        Entry  Horses 


iiT<)  Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

()77  Xcpoiiset  ivivcr  Coal  Co. 

(i78  Xcponset  River  Coal  Co. 

679  F.    E.    Xevv-eU 

680  A\\  H.   Pevear  &  Co. 

681  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

682  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

683  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

684  J.    T.    Tighe    Co. 

QS^  Wellino-ton  AA'ild  Coai  Co. 

686  Welling-ton  \A'ild  Coal  Co. 

687  AA'ellino-to.i  \\M  Coal  Co. 

688  AVellin^ton  AA'ild  Coal  Co. 


C.    F.    WILLARD* 

(ScM   \'(.i,.|;in    Diivfi-.s'   ci, 

John  Hohnrt 

2 
2 

Walter   Medicver 

2 

(;.    W.   A\alden*      . 

2 

.Martin    Faraher* 

2 

W.    \\    llui-ke 

2 

I'atk.    Lombard 

2 

A[.   L   O'Neil- 

2 

M|.    Donovan 

2 

D.   P>.   Prootor 

2 

Jas.    Mahoney 

2 

R.   J.    Harris 

2 

Thos.   W^lsh 

2 

*Driver  qualified  fm-   baclRp. 


CLASS  39— COAL  THREES 

The  jndges  may  award  snch  ri1)bons.  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  de>erved.  In  addition  the  Secretary  of  the  Association  offers  a  special  prize 
of  Five  Dollars  for  the  best  entry,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 

DENNIS    CROWLEY  3 

(Sed  Veteran  Di-ivevs'   Cla-st;) 

J.   L.  Thomas'-''  3 

Ji'hn    Horrigan  3 

Win.   I-^)therbee  3 

I'atk.    Hamilton  3 

.\rthnr   Stales  3 

Patk.    Crowley  3 

Fdw.    Fogartv  3 


680 

l!atchelder   Bros. 

690 

l^atchelder  i'ros. 

691 

P.oston  Coal  Co. 

692 

John   A.    P.radford   Coal  Co 

693 

Anstin    (iove   &   Son,   Inc. 

694 

Metropolitan  Coal   Co. 

695 

J.T.TigheCo. 

696 

J.T.  TigheCo. 

'Drivei'  qualified  for    liadg'e. 

99 


CLASS  40— CONTRACTORS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 
Of 

Horses 

tjyy 

W'm.  GilHgan  Co. 

i.    Connolly 

2 

698 

W'm.  GilH-an  Co. 

S.    CONROY 

2 

(Sen   X'rieian  Drivers 

Clc 

..s..) 

099 

W'm.  GilHs^an  Co. 

^1.  Cunningham 

2 

700 

Wm.  GiHigan  Co. 

WM.    DONECLIFF 

2 

(See  Vetei-an  Drivers' 

Ola 

SS) 

701 

Wm.  GilHgan  Co. 

J.    Donovan 

2 

702 

AViu.  GilHgan  Co. 

John    A I ay 

2 

703 

W'm.  GilHgan  Co. 

Wm.    McKenna 

2 

704 

Wm.  GilHgan  Co. 

Jacob   Xelson 

2 

70.5 

Wm.  GilHgan  Co. 

P.   Xoyce 

2 

706 

Wm.  GilHgan  Co. 

Dennis    Ward 

2 

707 

John  W.  Herlihy 

Florence    Farrett 

1 

708 

John  McXealy 

O.  J.   McNEALY 

2 

(See  Veteran  Drivers' 

Class  ■» 

709 

Matthew   V..  Xawn 

M.  Harkins- 

1 

710 

John  T.  X'tonc 

J.    Lewis- 

2 

711 

John  T.  Xoone 

M.   Ratigan* 

2 

712         Simon  Bros. 

•er  qualifiecl  for    harlfje. 

John    Daley 

2 

*Dri^ 

CLASS  41— MASTER  TRUCKMEN'S  AND  CONTRACTORS' 
RUNABOUT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  one  First,  one  Second  and  one  Third  ribbon,  and 
so  many  highly  coniniendetl  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  No. 

of  of 

Ribbon       Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No. 

of 

Horses 


713 

Boston   American 

(_;•.    \\\    Prichard 

714 

I.  Freedman  Co. 

L   Freedman 

715 

Wm.  Gilbgan  Co. 

J.  T.  Gilligan 

716 

J.   W.   McEnany 

J.   W.   Alalioney 

717 

N.   E.  Confectionery 

Co. 

H.    J.    LaCroix 

718 

AWihvorth  Mfg.   Co. 

T.    E.    ^looney 

CLASS  42— TRUCKMEN'S  SINGLES 

DIVISION    A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


719 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

720 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

721 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

722 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

723 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

724 

Henry  S.  Barron 

725 

Henry  S.  Barron 

726 

Blinn.  Morrill  &  Co. 

727 

BHnn.  Morrill  &  Co. 

728 

Boston   Eiev.   Ry.   Co. 

♦Driver  qualifi 

ea   iVn-    l.a.ls-.'. 

H.   P.   Morrill 

W.    P.    Meehan 

J.  Murray 

J.  English 

David  Walsh 

C.   A.    Clonse* 

W.    A.   Green 

H.  Marsh 

E.   H.   Marsh 

D.    Haves* 

101 


TRUCKMEN'S  SINGLES— Division  A— Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

72!) 

r.oslon    I'Je'v.    [iy.    Co. 

\).    McCarlhy- 

7;ju 

Ilo.slon    I'^k'w    Ry.    Co. 

C.   H.   Maddux 

731 

Asa  'lUirkelt 

J.    \\  .    Ihirkett 

732 

C.    r.uller   iS:   Co. 

H.   T.    W  hite 

733 

C.    llutler  &   Co. 

J.    C.    Lonergan 

734 

C.    JUitler  &   Co. 

j.  j.    Murpliy 

735 

W.   ¥.  Col)b  &  Son 

R.   j.   Jordan 

736 

W.   b'.  Col)b   &  Son 

H.   j.   Al-araghy 

737 

\\'.   F.   Cobl)  &  Son 

E.  T.  Kelly 

738 

^\■.   F.   Cobb  &  Son 

G.  Evans 

739 

G.   H.   Cummings 

AA'.    H.   Crowley 

740 

Dellea  L>ros. 

Cornelius    Durgin 

741 

M.  J.  CalUi-her 

J.    J.    Will-ck* 

742 

Frank    Gnecco 

Frank   Gntcco 

743 

H.  P,.  Gorld 

J.    J.    Crowley 

744 

H.  P..  Gould 

F.     H.     Go:dd* 

745 

H.  P.  Gould 

T.    .\.    Cm V  ley 

746 

er  nualifif 

T..  Greenberc;' 

="(1    for   l)iKlR-e. 

F.    Greenlierg 

*Driv 

DIVISION    B. 

The  Judges  may  award  sucli  ribbons.  First.  Second  o-  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


747  F.   S.   Harris  &  Son  M.    Condo  i  1 

748  F.  Jeselsohn  T.   Puxl)auMi  1 

102 


TRUCKMEN'S  SINGLES— Division  B— Continued 


No. 

of 

Ribbon 

No. 

of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

749  A.   W.  Knight  (i.    1^    James 

750  R.  A.  Kennett  R.    Alillikeu 

751  R.  A.  Kennett  H.    Harvey 

752  A.  Levine  H.    Lexine 
75.S  J.   W.    Alol'.nany  C.    E.    Dufi'ey 

754  J.   W.   McEnany  F.    A[.   Snllivan* 

755  J.  AA'.  AFcEnany  T.    F.    Kenr.edy 

756  ]\rerchants'  Transfer  Co.  J.  E\ers 

757  A.  A.  Rcnve  &  Son  G.  L.  AForandi 

758  A.  A.  Ron-e  &  Son  C.  H.  Hill 
750  Edw.  A.  Sears  G.  A\\  A\>kh 

760  The  D.  A.  Smith  Co.  R.  J.  Joyce 

761  The  D.  A.  Smith  Co.  H.  Littlefiekl 

762  The  D.  A.  Smith  Co.  J.J.  Magnor* 

763  The  D.  A    Smith  Co.  M.  F.  Wclc^- 

764  J.    P..    Smilh  W.  Draine 

765  L.    A.   Waterhouse  R.  A.  Davidson* 

766  L.   A.   \\\.tcrhouse  W.  15.  Loud 

767  Jas.   H.   Watts  H.  F.  O'Rrien 

768  Webber   ^S:    Co.  J.J.    Rand 

769  \\'el)ber   &    Co.  Remus   P>urt='- 

770  A\'el)l)er   c*^c   Co.  G.   H.   Whyte 

771  Webster  .v   Co.  S.   Xorris 

772  F.  D.  Wilkins  C.  S.  Linncll 

773  ¥.  1).  Wi'kins  T-  S.  McGranachan 


1 1 


4         C.  L.  York  Co.  E.  Bryant 


♦Driver  nualified  for  liadse. 


103 


CLASS  43— TRUCKMEN'S  DOUBLES 

DIVISION    A. 

The  Judges  ma\-  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved. 


No.            No. 

of               of 

Ribbon       Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No. 

of 

Horses 

775 

Bliiin  .Muirill  &  Co. 

James  G<->rman 

2 

776 

niinn  :\io:rill  &  Co. 

J.    Holland 

2 

776a 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

W'm.   Lane 

2 

777 

Boston  Elev.  Ry 

Co. 

T.  MURRAY* 

(.See  Veteran  Drivers' 

2 

Class) 

778 

Boston  Elev.  Ry. 

Co. 

E.  J.   Delaney 

2 

779 

Boston  Elev.  Ry. 

,  Co. 

J.    W.   Robinson 

2 

780 

W.  C.  Bray 

E.   P.    Maclntire* 

2 

781 

W.   C.  Bray 

A\'.   M.   Parrott* 

2 

782 

C.  Butler  c*^  Co. 

E.    R.    White 

2 

783 

C.  Butler  &  Co. 

J.    E.   Murray 

2 

784 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

G.   P.   Crnnin 

2 

785 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

P.  F.  Reilly 

2 

786 

E.   S.   Harris   & 

Son 

A.    Arthur 

2 

787 

E.    S.   Harris   & 

Son 

F.   Downie" 

2 

788 

E.   S.    Harris   & 

Son 

L.   Lamproii* 

2 

789 

R.  A.  Kennett 

C.    McCardiy* 

2 

790 

R.  A.  Kernett 

E.    Demerritt* 

2 

791 

R.  A.  Kennett 

G.  Peoples 

2 

792 

R.  A.   Kennett 

G.  Benham'' 

2 

793 

R.  A.  Kennett 

G.  Harvey 

2 

794 

R.  A.  Kennett 

R.    X.    Keith=^= 

2 

795 

R.  A.  Kennett 

■    (llinlifit^d    fur     li:nlKP. 

P.    Mcrrifield 

2 

♦Driver 

104 


DIVISION    B. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  rihhuus.  First,  Second  or  Third  a^,  they  deem  to 
he  deserved. 


No.            No. 

of               of 

Ribbon       Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No. 
of 
"        Horses 

796 

J.  W.   McKnany 

J.   A.   McDonald* 

2 

707 

J.  A\'.  ^PcEnany 

B.    M.    Flaherty 

2 

798 

J.  AA'.  ^IcEnany 

J.    J.    Sweeney 

2 

799 

J.  W.   McEiiany 

J.    J.    Ah  earn* 

2 

800 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

J.   AV.   Harris* 

2 

801 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Levi   AA^ildes 

3 

802 

Geo.  W.  Reid 

K.    R.    AfcCharles* 

2 

803 

Geo.  W.  Reid 

Geo.  AA^   Reid 

2 

804 

Yarnett  L.  Reid 

Yarnett    L.    Reid 

Foal 

805 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son 

J.    S.    Murphy 

2 

806 

Simonds    Bros. 

J.   Daley 

2 

807 

T.  C.  Treanor 

G.    Treanor 

2 

808 

L.   A.   AA'aterhouse 

Fred   A'ance* 

•-> 

809 

L.    A.   AA^aterhouse 

W.  F.  MEESE* 

2 

(Seo  Veteran  Drivers' 

Classi 

810 

F.  D.  AVilkins 

J.  H.   Harrington 

2 

811 

N.  AA^ard  Co. 

ifiecl   for      badse. 

A.  MtDonald 

2 

*Driver  quali 

CLASS  44— TRUCKMEN'S  FOURS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribhons,  First.  Second  or  Third  as  they  deem  to 
be  deserved.  In  addition  the  Association  offers  a  prize  of  Ten  Dollars  for  the 
best  team,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 

812  Blinn.  Morrill  &  Co.  MICHEL   DEVERAUX*   4 

(Seo  Veterayii  Drivers'   Clu."??;! 

813  Boston  Kiev.  Ry.  Co.  David    Reagan*  4 

814  R.  A.  Kennett  Levi    Clark*  4 

815  J.  AV.  McFnany  Lhilip    H.    Boyd*  4 

♦Driver  qualified  for   V.adg.-. 

THERE    ARE   1118   HORSES    IN   THE     PARADE. 

105 


STABLE    INSPECTION. 

(For  the  Stable   ln-])cctiiui  system,  sec  pa,>;es  4  and  .')  above.) 


LIST  OF     PRIZES. 

STABLES 

FIRST    PRIZE. 

Atwood  ,K:   McAi.-iniis  K.    A.    Kennett 

Atlantic   Works  Maiden   bdectric  Co. 

Batchelder  IJrothers      '  j.   w.   .McRnany 

Boston   Park  Department,  (Icmi-mc  A\'.  Reid 

(Morton  St..  Franklin  Pa-k)  -    ,       ,                        t-,         . 

^  Sul)url)an   (ias  .^  Electric  Co. 

Boston   Park   Dei)artment  c              •,,      tt-    i             T-^ 

.c^         1         \  S(Mner\-dle    Hiq-hwaA-   Depa- mient 

(Strandwav)  ,  ,,         ,          /^         -          ' 

^                    -  ^  I  ]> roadway) 

Carter's  Ink  Co.  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


Chelsea  CJas  Li.qht  Co. 
T.   G.  &  B.   S.   Fero-uson 


Ta_\lor   Br()s.   Latmdry 
Union   (dass   Co. 


S.   A.    I'reeman   Co.  j,,hn    \\'rio-ht 

Joseph   (iahm  \'  Son  ,  John   W.  Whitr.t-y 

SECOND  PRIZE 

Bay    Slate    i'diel    Co.  Dorchester  Stable  Co. 

Boston    American  I.    Freedman    &   Co. 

B.oston    I-devated,    Railway  Co.  Lo()seA\iles   15iscnit   Co. 

I'.oston    Park    l)c])artment  C.   H.    Nichols  \'   Bro. 

(Au.lnbon    Road)  D.  WMiitino-  ,K:  Sons 

Dennett    .^-   Johi-on  Whipple  &•  Co.  (East  Cambrid,q-e> 

10(i 


I'HTRD  PRIZE 


(  "r.     Fox    Co. 


IT.   1'.   lloMcl  ,\: 


A  Silver  Medal,  a  si^ccial  I'rizc  offered  by  Mrs.  AnvMula  E.  Dwio-ht  for 
the  sla1)le  makiii--  the  oreatest  inii)r()\emeiU  is  awarded  to  A.  A.  Rowe 
&  Son. 


\Ym.  Alexander 
A\-m.  71.  Allen 
Peter   r>arker 
F.  E.  Beedy 
Harry  F.  Boyd 
John  J.  Brady 
Robert  M.  Colbcr- 
C.  J.   Dillon 
William   Dtirdjar 
Henrv  Dtmican 


jo?.  P.  Douglas 


Patrick  Dailey 
Patrick  Cra\  en 


STABLE   FOREMEN. 

FIRST   PRIZE 

John  Frilker 
Peter  J.   Freeley 
John    Gilpin 
M.  G.  Hardinc^- 
T.  J.  Hardino- 
James  Htirst 
Dennis  Healey 
J.  G.  Hodsdon 
John   Killoran 

SECOXD  PRIZE 
\\'m.  Parker 

NIGHT  MAN 

FIRST   PRIZE 

Thomas  J.    Delaney 
Herbert    White 


Fred.  A.  Plyer 
Jt>hn  Redmond 
Wm.  E.  Salmon 
John  ^^^  Silliker 
Louis  H.  Steinberg- 
Charles  A.  Sntton 
Thomas  Waters 
Chas.  ^^^larf 
Wm.  Whitlev 


Geo.    W.    Prichard 


bihn    Walsh 


107 


MEN  AND  HORSES. 

One  fact  has  often  forced  itself  npon  the  attention  of  the  Directors,  namely, 
that  the  welfare  of  the  work-horse  is  bound  up  with  the  welfare  of  the  men  who 
drive  and  care  for  him.  In  slahles  where  the  men  arc  well  paid  and  are  treated 
with  kindness  and  consideration  by  the  proprietors,  the  horses,  in  turn,  are  well 
treated  bv  the  men.  and  look  sleek  and  contented.  On  the  other  hand,  in  stables 
where  there  is  a  bad  feeling,  or  utter  want  of  good  feeling,  between  the  employer 
and  his  men,  the  horses  suffer  accordingly.  Recognizing  these  facts,  some  pub- 
lic-spirited women  in  'New  York  and  also  in  Chicago  have  recently  organized 
clubs  for  teamsters,  and  even  clubs  for  teamsters'  wives.  This  is  a  step  in  the 
right  direction. 

Bad  teamsters  seem  to  gravitate  naturally  to  employers  who  do  not  reall}' 
care  about  their  horses.  If  the  owner  is  a  humane  man.  the  spirit  of  humanity 
will  pe'/vade  his  whole  business.  If  he  is  cruel,  or  simply  indifferent,  a  spirit 
of  b"utality,  or  at  least  of  selfish  indifference,  will  run  through  his  force. 

The  highly  developed  nervous  system  of  the  horse  renders  him  peculiarly 
capable  of  suffering.  Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops  far  short  of  absolute  bru- 
tality, keeps  him  in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation.  Anyone  wdio  is  ac- 
customed to  observe  horses  can  tell  by  a  single  glance  at  a  given  horse 
whether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad  or  indifferent  one.  The  expression  of  the 
animal's  eye  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears  tell  the  stor^-  un.mistakably. 

There  arc  many  teamsters  who  treat  the  horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and 
therefore  are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty  toward  him,  which  reacts  on  their  own 
characters.  Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their  lives,  and  their  daily  labor 
becomes  a  degradation  and  a  curse  to  them. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many  humane  drivers,  who  have  a  real  affec- 
tion for  their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in  their  appearance.  These  men 
make  good  husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens ;  and  their  daily  labor  is  not  only 
a  means  of  livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of  happiness.  To  reward  and  in- 
crease this  class  is  the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Associa- 
tion. 

308 


QUALITY    IN    WORK    HORSES. 

(")ur  judges  arc  inslniclcd  imt  to  award  liluc  ribl)ons  or  first  prizes  to  any 
Iiiirsc,  no  matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type  and 
tjuaUty.  QuaHty,  it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in  a  work  horse  as  in 
a  race  horse.  QuaHty  might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness  of  texture 
which  good  breeding  produces.  The  bone  in  a  well-ljred  horse  is  more  dense  and 
less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a  coarse  l)red  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course,  that  well-bred 
horses  are  sometimes  deficient  in  (|ualit_\-,  but  no  horse  has  qualit)'  unless  he  is  well- 
bred.  The  horse  with  quality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less  subject  to  dis- 
ease and  to  unsoundness  of  feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse.  Conse- 
quently it  is  more  humane  to  use  horses  with  quality  than  those  without  quality. 
Quality  and  beauty  are  usually  found  together,  and  yet,  as  all  horsemen  know, 
one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A  horse  may  have  quality  without  being  in  the 
least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may  have  a  yewe  neck,  a  large  head,  long  ears, 
a  Roman  nose,  a  sway  back,  flat  sides,  slack  loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a 
rat  tail ;  and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silk}-,  if  his  head  though  large  is  bony 
and  well-cut.  if  his  ears  though  long  are  well  shaped,  if  his  legs  are  flat  and 
clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are  of  iine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has  quality. 
Horses  of  the  Shire  and  Clyde  breeds  often  look  coarse  at  first  sight  on  account 
of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy  legs,  but  in  the  best  specimens  of  these  breeds 
the  long  hair  about  the  fetlocks  is  fine  and  silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not 
handsome,  are  clean-cut. 

Quality  is  thus  described  by  Professor  Rufus  C.  Obrecht  of  the  University 
of  Illinois :  '"Quality  in  a  horse  is  of  prime  importance.  This  term  when  ap- 
plied to  horses  has  reference  to  their  bones,  skin,  hair,  and  muscles.  Its  pres- 
ence is  shown  by  clean-cut  features  of  the  head ;  firm,  clean  bone ;  tendons  well 
defined ;  close  fitting,  glove-like  skin  ;  hair  fine  and  silky ;  an  abundance  of  fin- 
ish and  absence  of  coarseness,  but  not  necessarily  small  bone.  When  slightly  ex- 
erted the  skin  will  show  clearly  an  intricate  net  work  of  veins.  Coarse  hair  is 
usually  associated  with  a  coarse  skin  and  a  soft  spongy  bone  which  is  weak  and 
subject  to  disease.  With  (|uality  the  muscles  stand  out  prominently  and  are 
clearly  defined  which  aids  in  giving  a  horse  finish.  Quality  is  a  strong  indication 
of  the  extent  of  a  horse's  endurance.  These  two  characteristics  are  closelv  as- 
sociated, and  a  horse  lacking  in  (|uality  is  comparativel}-  a  cheap  animal." 


KM) 


LIST    OF    ADVERTISERS 


Ancliiir     Liiinlxpf     Piiming     Co.., Ill 

Animal  Kesiue  League  Model   Stable.  .  11 ;: 

Animal    Rescue   I^eague   Annex 11- 

Atlantic      ^A'()^ks h' 

Alwood    &    .MeManus Th 


Fclkin.    A.   C.    &    M.    L.   ( 

Ki^lis    Ice    (/nmpany 

Keiguson.   J.  G.    &    B.    S 

Foley.    R.    F.    &    Co 

Foigiu'.s.     Jas.     Sons.... 

Fox.    rxcoige    G.    Co 

Frediani.    .M.    &    Sons... 


Habfiuk.    !•:.   .1 .- 

Hal)(,-ofk.   F.   -M :  I 

Radser.    !■:.    H.    &   Sons  i'n ijs 

Bain    Bro.s i  - 

Baker.  Walter  &   Co.    (limited  i 1  : 

Bartlett     Bros - 

Bav    State  Clean   Towel    Ct bi: 

Bay    State    Fuel    Co T(> 

Belleviie       Hotel 72 

Berry,    C.    &   Co To 

Boston     Badge     Company '-'2 

Boston    Bundle    Wood    Co 71 

Boston    Flag   Pole   Co !'l 

Boston     Forge     Co 7S 

Boston    Industrial    Home    Ine r)^ 

Boston    Molasses    Co IS 

Boston   Rubber    Shoe    Co •<" 

Blinn.    Morrill   &  Co ">- 

Bradlord.    .John   A.    Coal   Co !>'i 

Breek.    .Joseph    &    Sons    Corp Sii 

Brock\\a\-Smith     Corpoi-ation H 

FJris-ham.     C.     Co. Sr, 

I'.i!.kminsl.-r.      Hole'. <> ! 

Jaitier.     C.     &     Co ■■>' 


Austin  &    Sons. 


Hanlev.    Dr.    James    F Si; 

Hairis.     E.     S '<2 

Higgins.    W.    J ss 

Hoed.   H.   P.   &  Sons :J4 

Hovey.  C.  F.  &  Co :i'; 

Howard.    G.    B.   <%;    Co ss 

Hovt   Comi:an.\ .    The '.M 

I-TuiU-Siiiller    Mfg.     Corpora  tii-n S( 


Crafts,    Henry    &    Sons ■■•> 

Carter's    Ink    Co •"'•■ 

Casey    &    Roth 7  i 

Chapin    &    Adams 7s 

Chase.    B.    C.    &    Co -.S 

Chelsea    Iron    <S:    Coal    Co 6S 

Chelsea    Gas    Light    Co SI 

City     Laundry 2S 

Clogher   &    Mulrenin 70 

Oommonwealtli     Hospital R"l 

Cronon    i<r    Foss is 


Dolierlv     &     Daly 

DorchestPr    Ice    d, 

I>o\-ei'  Stamiiing   &   Manufac,  irlng  C 

Drake     Bros.     Co 

Dyer.    L.    M.    &    Co.,    liic 


.    R.    A.. 

.John     R. 


Elder.     R.      J 

Rldridge.    I'-aker    & 
l':im   Farm   Milk   Cn 


Lawrence.   .J.    P.    &   Co Si; 

Locke     Coal     Co ■:  I 

London    Hainess    Co lu 

Liiwncv     M'alter    .M.    Co -''■ 

L.\nd.in\ille    Creamery    Assnciation 74 


M 


Maiden    Coal    Co SO 

Maiden    Electric   Co 4ii 

Metropolitan    Coal   Comiiany 21 

McCall,    F.    H 'i-' 

McCoi  mack.  Daniel  F .   •-' 

McKenney    &   Waterlmry s^ 

McEnany,    .1.    W no 

Miller.    John    &   Co lio 

Monar(h    Tyjjewriter   Comiianx- i'l 

Morse.    E.    S.  &  Co :'4 

Morss   ^:    Whyte   Co 4o 


11(1 


LIST    OF    ADVERTISERS— Continued 


Parker.    S.    G 

Park    &    Pollard    Cu..    The. 

Pastene.  P.   &  Co..   Inc 

Pierce     S.     S.    Co 

Plant.    Thos.    G.    Co 

Porter,   C.    H 

Priest    &    Smitli 

Prnctor    lu-iitlieis 

Pnri'oxia     Cnnipar.x- 


n'    Fei 


Uirh 
Finhi 

Roes 
Row 
Rusf 


AM  n.    W.    M SO 

sle     Brewery.     The 78 

^    A.    A.    &    Son 61 

ell.  W.   G.   &  H.   r SO 


Sain.«on    Draught    Spring'   Co G6 

Schwalm.    John 74 

Seaverns  Piano   Action   Co Sfi 

Shattuck    &    Jones h2 

Sie.gel.    Henry    Co 44 

Snow.  Wheeler  &  Cayanagh  Iloise  Co.  .8S 

Sniitli.    C.   B.   &  Bro ofi 

Smith     G.    AV.    &   F..    Iron    Co SI 

Sniitli.    D.   A.    Co r,6 


Sliindaid    lUittling    i<-    l';Ntra<-t    Ci 
Star     lac\ying    Co 

38 

Stilhnan     Bottling    Co 

Stone.    W.    P.    &    Co 

Sul)url>an    Gas    *   Kledri,-    Co 

Sullivan.     J.     If 

64 

70 

:tO 

T 

16 

.-jO 

The    Trimount    Laundry 

Tighe     J     T     Co 

84 

Tisdale,    Wilson    Co 

68 

U 

Union    Glass   Co 

(10 
iO 

W 

Walworth    Mfg.    Co 

]92 

9(1 

32 

Wilkins.   F.  D.   &  Co 

68 

.  .      36 

White     R     H     Co 

Whittemore    W     P 

'.>0 

A\'hitney    John    M..  .              .... 

(jO 

.".R 

\\"oods    John   M     &  Co                                     ■" ' 

X 

X-Zalia       Corporation 

!>4 

CURTIS  GUILD.  JR..  Pres. 


JAMES  H.  BARRy,  Mgr. 


COURTENAY  GUILD,  Treas. 


Anchor  Linotype  Printing  Company 

Magazine,  Book  and 
Nevyspaper    Printing 

Linotype    Composition    for    the    Trade 

OPEN    DAY    AND    NIQHT 

41    INDIA   STREET 

BOSTON,     MASS. 


Ill 


/  '  <^*<. 


Ya^^^ 


RED   ACR^  Animadl^iiel^giie^ 
FARM 


AT     STOW. 


Home  and  Hospital 
for  Horses 

Free   Board   and  Treatment  in  Deserv- 
ing Cases. 


Er-Fr-eOfcOWBtL 

in  niiAnnori  PiTRFft       pnsTnri 


107-109    WEST    BROOKLINE    ST. 


This  stable  is  mai  atained  to  show 
how  a  stable  should  be  kept.  The 
best  of  hay,  grain,  grcjoming  and  care, 
with  veterinary  atter 
furnished. 


rldance  free,  are 


Compliments  of 

A   Friend 


/^     /3  (/v^'t-^Ar^      h/^^<- 


Animal   Rescue 
League  Annex 


>EDHAM. 


Poor    Men's    Horses    Taken    Free    for 
Rest  and   Treatment. 


APPLY    AT 


!/,u^  /l,^  ^^^-^  Y'  ^''"''^''  ^^""^^^ 

.X^  ^    /^    ^^-^     "^ 


/O 


BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


h 


1910 

fULM 


4 


CATALOGUE 


Boston    Work  -  Horse 
Parade  Association 


(IXCOKPORATED) 


Eighth  Annual  Parade 
MAY  30th,  1910 


A.  T.  BLISS  &  CO.,  PRINTERS      60  PEARL  ST.  BOSTON 


DIREICXORS 


HENRY  C.   MERWIN,   President, 

St;itc   House,   Uooin  ,556. 

x\RTHUR  PERRIN,  Vice-President, 

FislK-r  Avciuic,   Mrookline. 

FRANCIS  PEABODY,  Jr.,  Vice-President, 

Devonshire  nuilding^. 

LEWIS  A.   ARMISTEAD,  Secretary, 

101   Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3d,  Treasurer 

Citv  Hall. 


CHARLES  L.  BURRILL,  Paul  Revere  Trust  Co. 
GEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON,  49  Hereford  Street. 
JOHN  H.  JEWETT,  2  Rockland  St.,  Roxbury 

AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.R.C.V.S.,  State  House,  Room  138. 
W.   D.   QUIMBY,  79  Portland  Street. 
BENJ.  W.  WELLS,  50  Congress  Street. 


AGENTS 

GILBERT    TOMPKINS  JAMES    MEREDITH 

Offick,   15  Beacon  Street,  Room  27 


HISTORY  OF  THE  ASSOCIATION 


HE  tirst  Work-Horse  Parade  in  Boston,  and  the  first  in  this 
country,  was  held  on  Memorial  Day,  1903,  under  the  man- 
agement of  ten  or  twelve  men  who  had  been  drawn  together 
by  their  interest  in  horses.  Soon  afterward  they  were 
incorporated  under  the  name  of  "The  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association;"  and  it  is  hoped  that  humane  persons 
who  have  wills  to  make  and  property  to  leave  will  bear  that 
title  in  mind.  The  Association  has  received  a  very  inadequate  support 
from  the  rich  horse-owners  and  horse-users  in  the  community;  and  were 
it  not  for  the  great  generosity  of  a  few  men  and  women,  among  whom 
are  the  widow  and  relatives  of  the  late  R.  A.  Lawrence,  the  founder  and 
first  President  of  the  Association,  it  is  doubtful  if  the  Annual  Parade 
could  be  maintained. 

The  custom  of  holding  Work-Horse  Parades  is  slowly  but  surely 
spreading  over  the  country,  and  we  are  proud  to  say  that  our  Parade  has 
served  as  a  model  for  most  of  the  others. 

Among  the  places  in  which  a  Parade  has  been  held,  or  is  to  be  held 
during  the  present  year,  are  the  following:  New  York,  Philadelphia, 
Chicago,  San  Francisco  (the  largest  parade  yet  held),  Buffalo;  Burlington, 
Iowa;  Columbus  and  Youngstown,  Ohio;  Grand  Rapids  and  Manistee, 
Michigan;  Ithaca,  N.  Y.;  Milwaukee;  Minneapolis;  Nashua,  N.  H.; 
Hartford;  New  Haven;  New  Orleans;  Seattle,  Washington;  Fall  River; 
Worcester;   Houlton,  Maine;  and  Melbourne,  Australia. 

THE   USES   OF  THE  ASSOCIATION 

This  Association  does  not  confine  itself  to  holding  an  Annual  Parade. 
We  have  continually  in  mind  the  unfortunate  horse  who  is  not  fit  to 
appear  in  any  parade,  and  we  do  what  we  can  to  diminish  his  sufferings. 


OUR  AGENTS 

During  the  past  year  we  have  employed  most  of  the  time  one  or  more 
Agents  to  go  about  among  the  poorer  class  of  stables,  and  assist  the 
owners  of  the  horses  with  advice,  medicine  and  other  means.      Men  who 

3 


treat  their  horses  with  cruelty  are  warned,  and  extreme  cases,  especially 
those  of  horses  incurably  lame  or  otherwise  unfit  for  work,  nre  reported 
to  the  Massachusetts  S.  P.  C.  A.,  and  in  such  cases  that  Society  has 
always  been  prompt  to  act. 

We  are  greatly  indebted  also  to  the  Board  of  Health  of  the  City  of 
Boston,  The  Chairman,  Dr.  Durgin,  the  other  Members  of  the  Board, 
and  Mr.  Jordan,  the  Chief  Inspector,  have  used  their  authority  to  brirg 
about  a  proper  tre  tment  of  horses  in  stables,  so  far  as  the  law  permits 
them  to  act.  All  stables  in  the  city  are  subject  to  their  inspection,  and 
their  suggestions  are  never  disregarded. 

MEETINGS  FOR   DRIVERS 

Two  meetings  for  Drivers,  Stablemen,  and  all  persons  interested  in 
horses,  were  held  in  Kingsley  Hall,  at  which  addresses  were  made  by 
Dr.  Rowley,  President  of  the  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  and  others.  At  these 
meetings  also  Mr.  W.  D.  Qiiimby,  one  of  our  directors,  made  an  address 
on  Humane  Harnessing,  illustrated  by  a  harness  of  the  form  approved  by 
the  Association,  and  stereopticon  pictures  of  work-horses  were  shown 
and  explained  by  the  President  of  the  Association. 

BULLETINS 

The  Association  issued  several  months  ago  a  Bulletin  on  Feeding  and 
Watering,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins.  This  Bulletin  has  been  widely  read  and 
highly  commended.  It  is  reprinted  at  the  end  of  this  catalogue,  where 
will  be  found  also  a  Bulletin,  just  issued,  on  The  Disposal  of  Old  Horses. 
There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  community  that  old  horses  and  pain- 
fully lame  horses  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  otherwise 
disposed  of  in  a  humane  ma'^ner.  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  home  for  hoises, 
is  always  ready  to  receive  and  care  for  the  old  or  worn-out  horse,  wiihout 
charge  to  his  owner.  Another  Bulletin,  which  is  an  answer  to  the  question 
will  the  Motor  Wagon  take  the  place  of  the  Work-Horse,  and  results 
from  a  thorough  investigation  of  the  subject,  has  just  been  published. 
All  these  Bulletins  can  be  had,  free,  on  application  to  our  Secretary. 
A  fourth  Bulletin  on  the  subject  of  vacations  for  Work-Horses  is  now  in 
preparation.  We  believe  it  to  be  a  fact  that  an  annual  vacation  for  the 
Work-Horse,  and  especially  for  the  old  Work-Horse,  is  a  matter  not 
only  of  humanity,  but  of  economy. 


THE  STABLE  INSPECTION 

The  most  important  activity  of  this  Association,  next  to  the  Parade, 
and  perhaps  not  second  to  that,  is  the  s)  stem  of  Stable  Inspection. 

Entries  tor  this  may  be  made  at  any  time,  and  by  stables  of  all  kinds, 
including  livery,  hack  and  boarding  stables.  There  is  no  entry  fee.  The 
stables  are  judged,  not  in  competition  with  one  another,  but  accordingly 
as  they  s  itisfy  the  standard  fixed  by  the  Judges.  The  prizes  are  unli  nited 
in  number,  and  consist  mainly  of  silver  medals,  awarded  to  the  proprietor 
and  to  foremen  and  nightmen.  The  stables  and  the  foremen  are  not 
always  graded  alike.  Someimes  a  foreman  makes  poor  use  of  the  facili- 
ties at  his  command,  and,  more  often,  a  good  foreman  has  to  struggle 
against  pDor  facilities  and  bad  drivers.  The  Judges  are  the  most  expert 
and  impartial  men  that  we  can  find  in  Boston  or  elsewhere.  Their  reports 
are  confidential,  and  are  communicated  only  to  the  proprietor  of  the 
stable. 

Among  the  p3ints  considered  by  the  Judges  are  quality  and  quantity 
of  hay  and  grain,  watering,  bedding,  blanketing,  grooming,  ventilation, 
stalls,  sanitary  condition  of  stable,  and  the  handling  of  the  horses  by 
grooms  and  drivers. 

The  stable  inspection  is  availed  of  more  and  more  every  year,  espe- 
cially by  large  concerns.  We  had  forty  entries  this  year,  and  the  num- 
ber of  horses  owned  by  each  pers  >n  or  corporation  varied  from  one  to 
three  and  four  hundred.  The  total  number  of  horses  in  the  stables 
inspected  was  over  two  thousand. 

Many  large  concerns,  especially  corporations,  leave  their  stable 
management  wholly  to  subordinates,  and  often  do  not  know  whether  it  is 
good  or  bad,  or  how  .it  could  be  improved.  There  are  men  working 
alone  at  night  n  city  stables,  old  employees  in  many  cases,  as  to  whom 
the  question  is  never  asked  whether  they  do  their  work  well  or  ill.  Most 
of  these  men  are  faithful.  A  few  of  them  have  been  unearthed  b}'  our 
stable  inspection  Judge's,  and  it  is  pathetic  to  see  how  pleased  and  sur- 
prised they  are  to  find  thit  any  human  being  takes  an  interest  in  them  or 
in  their  work. 

No  amount  of  system  cai  compensate  for  the  want  of  this  personal 
interest  in  the  horses  and  in  the  men  who  take  care  of  them.  It  should 
be  the  business  of  some  person  in  authority  in  every  concern  to  know 
how  the  horses  look  and  feel,  whether  the  men  in  charge  are  faithful  or 
not,  how  long  they  have  been  in  the  service,  what  suggestions  they  have 
to  make,  and  so  forth.     It  seems  to  be  the  policy  of  man}-  large  corpora- 


tions  and  firms  to  treat  men  and  horses  alike  as  if  they  were  machines. 
This  is  not  good  "business,"  to  say  nothing  of  humanity. 

The  following  matters  especially  have  been  forced  upon  the  attention 
of  the Judges: 

1.  That  if  the  men  are  on  good  terms  with  the  employer,  the 
horses  are  usually  well  treated  ;  whereas,  if  the  men  are  dissatis- 
fied, the  horses  are  always  badly  treated. 

2.  That  the  worst  enemy  of  the  horse  is  intoxicating  liquor 
in  the  driver  or  stableman. 

3.  That  in  many  stables,  especially  trucking  stables,  there  is 
an  insufficient  force  on  Sundays,  so  that  the  horses  are  not  proper- 
ly cleaned,  bedded  or  watered. 

4.  That  in  many  stables,  otherwise  excellent,  the  horses  are 
not  watered  at  night  after  eating  their  hay,  when  they  are  always 
thirsty. 

5.  That  in  case  of  many  large  concerns  the  stable  treatment 
is  almost  perfect,  but  the  drivers  hurry  the  horses  when  they  start 
out  in  the  morning,  or  after  the  noon  feed,  and  also  hurry  them  to 
the  stable  at  night,  bringing  them  in  hot.  This  is  especially  true 
of  the  lighter  horses,  such  as  those  used  by  bakers,  milk  dealers 
and  department  stores. 

For  the  prizes  awarded  this  year   see  the   pages  at  the  end  of  the 
entry  list. 

The  Association  is  indebted  to  the  following  Stable  Judges  for  their 
very  careful  and  conscientious  work: 

Dr.  J.   H.   RoLLix^j  Joseph  B.  Matthews 

R.  A.  Kennett  Gilbert  H.  Prescott 


EIGHTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,   1910 


■"  NY   horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  or 
out  of  condition  will  be  disqualified. 

Every  entry  not  disqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon, 
either  first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow).  In 
the  Old  Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons  are 
awarded,  which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other 
classes. 
Each  blue  ribbon  winner  will  receive  a  brass  medal  to  be  worn  as  a 
permanent  ornament  on  the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be 
awarded.  The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(i)      Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to 
green  horses,  and,  if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less 
than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any 
horse,  unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse 
of  good  type  and  good  quality.* 

MANNERS 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the 
horse  has  been  treated  kindly. 


COLOR 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched 


pairs. 


THE    VEHICLE 


The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy 
for  the  horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the 
entry,  or  reduce  the  grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 


For  what  is  meant  by  quality,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  catalogue. 


THE    HARNESS 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count ;  but  a 
harness  that  is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill- 
fitting,  especially  in  the  collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former 
years  by  reason  of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for 
some  other  defect  in  the  harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  and 
inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs,  are  also  common 
defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work 
required  of  it,  is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be 
observed  especially  in  respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which 
great  strength  is  not  required.  Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings, 
tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments  should  not  be  used. 

Housings  for  collars,  except  for  use  in  rain-storms,  are  strong- 
ly disapproved  by  the  Association  as  being  unnecessary,  expensive 
and  adding  to  the  weight  of  the  harness. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association,  and  shown 
in  a  photograph  printed  in  this  catalogue,  weighs  onl}'  53  pounds, 
collar  and  all,  and  it  is  big  enough  for  any  1350-pound  horse. 
Horses  of  that  weight  frequently  carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or 
80  pounds.  The  bridle  shown  in  the  photograph  weighs  less  than 
two  pounds  —  about  half  the  usual  weight. 


DRIVERS-  BADGES 

A  medal  or  badge,  to  be  worn  on  the  person,  will  be  given  to  ever}- 
driver  who  shows  in  the  Parade,  in  good  condition  and  serviceably  sound, 
the  same  horse  or  horses  shown  by  him  in  the  Parade  of  the  year  before. 
(In  the  case  of  four-horse  teams,  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses 
were  shown  by  him  the  previous  3  ear.) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  driver,  all  things 
considered;  and  silver  badges  will  be  given  to  the  ten  who  rank  next.* 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  be  ambitious  to 
obtain  one  of  these  badges,  and  that  possession  of  the  badge  will  be  the 
best  recommendation  that  a  driver  could  have. 


*In    1909  the  gold  badge  was  awarded  to  Giiildp'ord  D.  Saunders  of  the  Fells  Ice  Company 
and  the  following  received  silver  badges  :  — 

George  Benham  W.  H.  Bryson  K.  Demerritt  G.  F.  Seamon 

J.  J.  Brady  Remus  Bert  M.  J.  Griffin  W.m.  II.  Vaughn 

Edgar  Bryson  Levi  Clark  G.  C  Lienharu  Fred.  Weir 


SPECIAL   PRIZES 

In  memory  of  R.  A.  Lawrence,  its  lirst  President,  the  Association 
offers  a  gold  medal  to  the  owner  and  a  silver  medal  ^o  tli«  driver,  for  the 
best  four-horse  team  \n  the  Parade,  provided  also  that  the  driver  tikes 
care  of  his  horses.     There  are  second  and  third  prizes  in  this  Class. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums 
of  money,  are  offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse  and  other  classes 
by  the  fallowing:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals,  American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Rescue 
League,  Red  Acre  Farm,  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan,  Mrs.  Arthur  Foote,  Miss 
Katherine  Foote,  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington,  Mrs.  Amanda  Dwight, 
George  W.  Harrington,  W.  D.  Qj-]imb3%  Benj.  W.  Wells,  James  Forgies' 
Sons,  The  Mark  Cross  Company,  The  London  Harness  Company,  and 
others.     These  will  be  found  specified  in  the  entry  list  below. 

DRIVING   COMPETITION 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four,  and  another  for  si\-in-hand  teams 
will  be  held  in  or  near  Cominonwealth  Avenue,  while  the  judging  is 
taking  place.  Entries  for  this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand. 
The  first  prize  will  be  a  silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 

U.  S.  LETTER   CARRIERS 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  who 
have  horses;  of  these  there  are  about  thirt3'-five.  Their  3'earl3' allowance 
for  providing  and  maintaining  a  horse  and  wagon  is  onl}'  S3 25.  This 
sum  is  grossl}'  inadequate.  The  men  do  th  iir  best,  but  their  horses  and 
wagons  make  a  poor  showing.  Onl}'  three  have  made  entries  in  the 
Parade  of  1910. 

NOTICE  TO   SPECTATORS 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visib'e  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing  stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing  stand 
at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclos'ed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the    harness,  and    other   imperfections,   not   always    apparent,   frequently 


exclude  a  tine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.     It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  c 
and  that  yreen  horses  are  discriminated  against. 


remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a   horse 


NOTICE  TO  THE   PUBLIC 

When  any  person  exhibits  a  horse  in  the  Parade,  it  may  be  taken  as 
nearly  certain  that  his  horses  in  general  are  well  cared  for  and  in  good 
condition.  This  is  a  point  upon  which  the  Association  insists;  and  every 
year  entries  of  tine  horses  are  rejected  because  the  other  horses  belonging 
to  the  same  owner  are  not  in  good  condition.  Owing  to  the  difficulty  of 
inspecting  so  many  horses  it  sometimes  happens  that  entries  appear  in  the 
catalogue,  but  are  excluded  from  the  Parade. 

An  exhibit  in  the  Parade  has  come  to  have  a  considerable  advertising 
value;  and  intending  exhibitors  are  hereby  warned  that  no  entry  will  be 
accepted  from  one  whose  whole  stable  will  not  bear  inspection. 

THE  JUDGES 

If  the  principles  upon  which  the  prizes  are  awarded  be  kept  in  mind, 
the  Association  believes  that  there  will  be  very  little  dissatisfaction  with 
the  decisions  of  the  Judges.  Increasing  care  has  been  taken  each  year  in 
the  selection  of  them;  those  who  were  incompetent,  or  inhumane  toward 
their  own  horses,  have  been  excluded;  ard  the  Association  is  confident 
that  its  Judges  now  form  a  band  of  men  as  competent  and  impartial  as 
could  be  secured.  To  be  numbered  among  them  is  regarded  as  an  honor, 
and  many  applications  for  the  position  are  rejected  by  the  Association. 

The  Judges  render  their  arduous  and  difficult  service  without  com- 
pensation, although  many  of  them  come  from  distant  points,  and  the 
Association   hereby  expresses  its  gratitude  for  their  generous  assistance. 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE. 

Horses  walked  on  starting  out  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  coon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and  at 
night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or  if 
the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar  and  saddle. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only, 
horses  wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge 
on  coming  in.  (This  does  not  mean  wash- 
ing the  horse,  much  less  turning  the  hose 
on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not  much, 
on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.  (In  any  case, 
watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay. 
This  is  especially  necessary   in   summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday 
noon;   cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter. 

Horses  sidted  in  the  bran  mash,  or  other- 
wise, with  regularity. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie 
with  heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or 
grated  in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for 
the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all — Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD   STABLE 


Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morn- 
ing, and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing 
hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and 
horses  rushed  into  stalls  without  rubl)ing, 
cleaning,  or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no 
matter  how  hot ;  or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating 
their  hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night, 
and  horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  —  too  much 
trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody 
happens  to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean  ;  sweat  allowed  to 
accumulate  on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up 
dirty. 

Stable  close — no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the 
horses  heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  evening 
and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken  ;  doors  left  open  ;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  nights. 

No  place  for  drying  w'et  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge  ; 
no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about ;  general  atmosphere  of 
noise  and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out 
or  put  up,  nor  on  Sundays. 


C  H  I  E:  F     MARSHAL. 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3RD 


Francis  Peabody,  Jk. 

Arthur  Perrin 

Austin  Peters,  M.  R.  C.  V.  S. 

John  H.  Jewett 

William  D.  Quimbv 

Charles  L.  Burrill 


AIDS 


Harry   W.  Soule 
Albert  B.  Lewis 
James  I.  Brooks 
John  F.  Waters 
William  W.  Watkix 
Norton  Wigglesavorth 


Lyman  O.  Shurtlefp' 


V 


Robert   J.  Taylor 


ABELE,  DR.  FRANCIS 
ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  T-  M. 
A  TWOOD,  ROBERT  F. 

BAKER,  GEO.  M. 
BAKER,  JAMES  E. 
BALKAM,  DR.  R.  W. 
BARTLETT,  W.  R. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BOLGER,  DR.  D.  L. 
B03W0RTH,  CHAS.  W. 
BRADLEY,  DR.  F.  H. 
BRAY,  W.  C. 
BRIGHAM,  W.  E. 
BUNKER,   DR.  MADISON 
BUTLER,  W.   L. 

CARTER,  R.  D. 
COLDWELL,  ELIAS  F. 
COLLINSON,  C.  M.  B. 
W.  K,   COLE 
COPLEY,  A.  H. 

DELANEY,  D.  J. 
DELANO,  Dr.  CHAS.  W. 
DONOVAN,  DANIEL  J. 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 
DUMMER,  R.  G. 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 
DUNICAN,  T.  N. 

ELDREDGE,  F.  S. 

FELLOWS,  ALBERT 
FENELON,  P.  C. 
FENNER.   R.  H. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 
FOGG,  G.  M. 


RINARY     INSPEICTOR 

DR.  FRANK  J.  SULLIVAN 


u  s  H  e:  R  s 

J.  F.  Whitney 
JUDGES 

GILLIGAN,  JAMES  T. 
GORDON,  JOHN 
GREELY,   PHILIP 


HARDING,   R.  W. 
HARRINGTON,  GEO.   W. 
HARRISON,    CAPT.   RODEN 
HAVEN,   HIRxAM  A. 
HOLDEN,  C,  B. 
HOFFMAN,  E.   H. 
HILL,  DR.  A.  G.  ' 


JOHNSON,  A.  R. 


KENNETT,  R.  A. 
KENNEY,  J.  R. 


LANGLAN,  THOMAS 
LIB  BY.  WYMAN 
LOVELESS,  W.  E. 


MACK,  THOS.  W. 
MANLEY,  LOWELL 
MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MAXWELL,  J.  P. 
McGANN,  T.  T- 
McKENNEY,  j.  B. 
McMANUS,  H.   P. 
MELVIN,  A.  D. 
MERRILL,  S.  D. 
MERWIN,  A.  G. 
MILLS,  JOHN  F. 
MOONEY,  THOMAS 


H.   A,   BoSSARDT 


PARKER,   AUGUSTIN  H. 
PEPPER,  CHARLES  H. 
PERRY,  DR.  CHARLES  H. 
PETERS,  H.  M. 
PETTIGREW,  J.   A. 
PIERCE,   DR.   B.  D. 
PIERCE,  GEO.  W. 


QLIIMBY,  T. 


RING,  THOMAS   H. 
ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,   I.  E. 
ROLLINS,  DR.   {.  H. 
RUGG,  JULIUS  E. 
RYDER,  W.    H. 
SAWYER,  CHARLES  W. 
SHEA,  J   B. 
SHEEHAN.  DR.  T.  S. 
SMITH,  LEWIS 
SOUTHER,  DR.   II.  A. 
STEARNS,  DR    O.  F. 
STUART,  GEORGE  E. 
SULLIVAN,  DR.  F.  J. 
SULLIVAN,  J.   H. 


TIGIIE,  T.  F. 
TUTTLE,  J.  M. 


WADSWORTH,  DR.   S.  F. 
WALES,  S.  WALTER 
WHITE,  DR.  A.  F. 
WHITE,  DR.  W.  T. 
WHITTEMORE,  W.  P. 
WRIGHT,  HARRY   E. 


CONITRIBUXORS,      1910 


R.  L.  Agassiz 

C.  W.  Allen 

Miss  Sarah  M.  Allen 

Mrs.  W.  H.  Ames 

American  Humar.e  Education  Society 

Mrs.  George  T.  Angell 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Hatciielder  Bros. 
Miss  Mary  C.  Bacon 
Mrs.  F.  E.  Bacon 
Miss  Fannie  Bartlett 
Nelson  S.  Bartlett 
Walter  C.  Baylies 
Franklin  H.  Beebe 
E.  Pierson  Beebe 
Mrs.  J.  Arthur  Beebe 
Mrs.  Arthur  W.  Blake 
Miss  Marion  L.  Blake 
Mrs.  R    A.  Boit 
Miss  Annie  Bossert 
Peter  C.  Brooks 
Mrs.  Elizabeth  B.  Bryant 
Mrs.  W'm.  S.  BuUard 
I.  Tucker  Burr 

C.  A.  Campbell 

Samuel  Carr 

Alfred  E    Chase 

Mrs.  Theodore  Chase 

Eugene  Clap(> 

Eliot  C.  Clarke 

Miss  Martha  A.  Clarke 

Carter's  Ink  Company 

E.  S.  C. 

Mrs.  M.  S.  Cobb 

Mrs.  Walter  H.  Cowing 

Miss  Grace  G.  Cowing 

Miss  Cletnence  Crafts 

George  G.  Crocker  '* 

Frederick  Cunningham 

Mrs.  J.  Henry  Davenport 
Mrs.  John  E.  Devlin 
Miss  Elizabeth  P.  Douglass 
Mrs.  A.  E.  Dwight 

Mrs.  R.  D.  Evans 

Frederic  P.  Fish 
Mrs.  Albert  A.  Fisher 
Miss  Annie  E.  Fisher 
J.  Murray  Forbes 
Miss  E.  K.  Forgan 
Mrs.  Arthur  Foote 
Miss  Katherine  Foote 
Mrs.  Reginald  Foster 
A  Friend,  Brookline 

Mrs.  Frederick  L.  Gay 
Miss  Julia  Goddard 
E.  W.  Grew 

Geo.  G.  Hall 

Miss  Mary  H.  Hayes 

Augustus  Hemenway 

Mrs.  A.  T.  Hittinger 

Jacob  Hittinger 

Albert  Howe 

Mrs.  fohn  E.  Hudson 

Wm.D.  Hunt 


Miss  Nora  lasigi 

Miss  Florence  Jarves 

E    C.J. 

Fred.  L. Jordan 

Mrs.  Charles  W.  Kennard 
Charles  A.  Kidder 
G.  Otto  Kunhardt 

Mrs.  R.  A.  Lawrence 

John  Lawrence 

Miss  Madeline  Lawrence 

Joseph  Lee 

Miss  Helen  Loring 

Miss  Katherine  P.  Loring 

Mrs.  Thacher  Loring 

Miss  Georgiana  I^owell 

Miss  Abbie  F.  Manning 

Francis  H.  Manning 

T.  J.  Marble 

Mass.  Society  for  the  Prevention 

of  Cruelty  to  Animals 
Mrs.  Francis  J.  Moors 
Mrs.  B.  T.  Morrison 
Dr.  Henry  L.  Morse 
John  T.  Morse,  Jr. 
Miss  Ellen  F.  Moseley 

Mrs.  David  Nevins 

"Ormonde" 

Mrs.  Charles  S.  Parker 

Francis  S.  Parker 

Mrs.  Wm.  L.  Parker 

The  Misses  Parsons 

Mrs,  Francis  Peabody,  Jr. 

Phillip  G.  Peabody 

F,  A.  Peters 

Miss  Margery  W.  Phelps 

D.  L.  Pickman 

Mrs.  Sarah  G.  Putnam 

Red  Acre  Farm 

Dr.  Wm.  L.  Richardson 

AHss  Rodman 

R.  M.  Saltonstall 
"September  23" 
Dr.  Geo.  B.  Shattuck 
Miss  Blanche  Shimmin 
Dr.  F.  P.  Sprague 
Mrs.  Daniel  Staniford 
Mrs.  Robert  S.  Slurgis 
Henry  W.  Swift 

Three  Sisters 

Miss  Katherine  A.  Tarbell 
Mrs.  Ezra  R.  Thayer 

Miss  Elizabeth  Ward 
Benjamin  W.  Wells 
George  Wigglesworth 
Ralph  B.  Williams 
Olive  B.  Winslow 
Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington 
John  Wright 


Qlnnr^rt  Prngram 


FROM   8  TO    10   O'CLOCK   A.  M. 

@ 

REVIE^A/ING  STAND 
Junction  of  Commonwealth  Avenue  and  Beacon  Street 


3- 
4- 

5- 
6. 

7- 
8. 
9- 

lO. 

1 1. 

12. 

14- 

15- 

i6. 

17- 

iS. 


March,  "Cymbeline"         ..... 

Overture,  "Festival  Overture" 

Sei-ection,  "Old  Dutch"  .... 

Popular  Songs  :  a,   "Put  on  Your  Old  Gray  Bonnet 
b.   "Shine  on  Silvery  Moon" 

March,  "Monstrat  Viani" 

Intermezzo,  "Indian  Summer" 

Medley  of  War  Songs 

Waltz,  "Spring  and  Love" 

Popular  Medley,  "Amnia" 

Selection,   "Dollar  Princess" 

March,  "Chocolate  Soldier" 

Overture,  "Zampa" 

Selection,  "Bright  Eyes" 

Popular  Songs  :  a.  "Rings  on  My  Fingers" 
b.  "Has  Anyone  Seen  Kelly 

"Reminiscences  of  Ireland" 
Intermezzo,  "O-ga-lal-la" 
Selection,  "Three  Twins" 
March,  "2nd  Connecticut" 

"Star  Spangled   Banner 


Fulton 

Keler-Bela 

Herbert 

Wenrich 
Edwards 

Joy 

Moret 

lobani 

\  ^on  Blon 

Ascher 

Fall 

Strauss 

Herold 

Hose /in  a 

Scott 
Murphy 

Godfrey 

Snyder 

Hoschna 

Reeves 


FIRST    CORPS    CADETS     BAND 

JOHN  B.   FIELDING,  Bandmaster 
14 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in 
the  Parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer, 
or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  The  Association  gives  a  second  prize  of  five 
dollars,  and  also  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in  this  class  (the  prize  winner 
excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Years 

of 
Service 

Sanitary  Dept.,  Boston 

20 

Bridge  Dept.,          ** 

21 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

2J 

Howard  Bros. 

22 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

22 

Water  Dept.,  Boston 

22 

Batchelder  Bros. 

22 

C  W.  Walker  Co. 

23 

Water  Dept.,  Boston 

22 

L.  A.  Waterhoose 

24 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

25 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

25 

Sanitary  Dept.,  Boston 

25 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

25 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

26 

Stetson  Coal  Co. 

26 

Water  Dept.,  Boston 

26 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

26 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

26 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

27 

C  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

27 

Oak  Grove  Farm 

27 

Curtis  &  Pope  Co. 

27 

Water  Dept.,  Boston 

27 

WILLIAM  F.  BLAKE 
JOHN  J.  GREEN 
JAMES  GORMAN 
JOHN  HOWARD 
H.  B.  SMITH 
BENJAMIN  A.  GREEN 
DENNIS  CROWLEY 
JAMES  F.  WALKER 
MICHAEL  RONAN 
WILLIAM  F.  MEESE 
NORRIS  W.  CURRIER 
MICHEL  DEVEREAUX 
JOHN  B.  CARR 
E.  J.  TEW 
LOUIS  BRLA.R 
JOHN  F.  CONNORS 
MICHAEL  F.  BURKE 
MELVILLE  DICKIE 
CLARENCE  H.  JONES 
JAMES  McLEAN 
WILLIAM  E.  DENVIR 
PATRICK  J.  McDONOUGH 
THOMAS  H.  HICKS 
MATHEW  NOLAN 


THE     HOME    OF 

"QUEEN  QUALITY" 


-USiSS^S)  _iiJSS» 


THE  PLANT  FACTORY  ALONE  NOW  PRODUCES 
ONE-FOURTH  AS  MUCH  SHOE  VALUE  AS  THE 
ENTIRE  CITY  OF  BROCKTON,  ONE-THIRD  AS 
MUCH  AS  THE   CITY  OF  HAVERHILL,  AND  ONE- 


FOURTH^AS   MUCH  AS  THE  CITY  OF  LYNN,  THE 

THREE  GREATEST  SHOE  PRODUCING  CITIES  IN 

THE    WORLD. 

THOMAS  G.  PLANT  COMPANY 

BOSTON,    MASSACHUSETTS 


SOLD  IN  BOSTON  BY  JAMES  A.  HOUSTON  COMPANY 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS -Continued 


THOMAS  WILLIAMS 
OWEN  J.  McNEALY 
MICHAEL  J.  CURRAN 
GEORGE  C  LIENHARD 
DANIEL  F.  COLLINS 
PATRICK  HUGHES 
PATRICK  QUINN 
LEONARD  COOK 
SOLON  J.  RICHARDSON 
CHRISTOPHER  F.  WILLARD 
HENRY  KNOX 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Years 

of 

Service 

Watet  Dept.,  Boston 

27 

John  McNealy 

28 

J.  T.  Scully  Co. 

25 

C  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

30 

Dover  Stamping  &  Mfg.  Co 

30 

W.  H.  Pevear  &  Co. 

30 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 

32 

W.  C.  Bray 

32 

City  Laundry 

36 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

36 

Geo.  McQuesten  Co. 

37 

The  Veteran  Driver's  Prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  30  )ears;  in  1905  by  Thomas  Haley, 
an  employee  of  tlie  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Company,  with  a  record  of  40  years;  and  a 
medal  was  also  given  to  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation 
for  3S  years.  In  1906  the  medal  was  won  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.  T.  & 
A.  G.  Van  Nostrand  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years;  in  1907  by  John 
Francis  Kelley,  employed  by  R.  O.  Brigham  for  42  years;  in  190S  by  Thomas  Colbert, 
employed  by  Henry  Craft's  Sons',  and  by  James  Holland,  employed  by  P,  O'Riordt-n 
Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a  medal,  having  each  served  for  a  term  of  43  years. 
A  special  silver  medal  was  also  awarded  to  John  Green  for  his  service  of  49  years  with 
the  City  of  Boston.  In  1909  this  prize  was  won  by  John  M.  Lee,  of  the  Boston  Ice 
Company,  with  a  record  of  53  years  service. 


"^oisa" 
Ceylon    Tea 

Pure  Rich         Fragrant 


■   Packed  in  Parchment-lined 
One  pound  and  half-pound  Canisters 

WE    INVITE    COMPARISON   WITH   OTHER  TEAS 
OP  SIMILAR   PRICE 

S.   S.   PIERCE  CO. 

Tremont  and  Beacon  Streets BOSTON 

Copley  Square BOSTON 

Coolidge  Corner :       .       .      BROOKLINE 


CLASSES 


CLASS    I— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  A 

First  Prize  :     Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 
Second  Prize  :     Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Four  Third  Prizes  of  Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

I 

Walworth  Mfg.  Co. 

Daniel  Donovan 

Sam 

H 

10 

2 

- 

*John  Cray 

Charlie 

16 

I  I 

3 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

*W.  B.  Smith 

Jerry 
Tom 

15 
15 

ID 
10 

4 

M.  J.  Gallagher 

*James  J.  Willock 

Mike 

16 

10 

5 

Edward  E.  Hannaford 

*Harry  S.  Johnson 

Chub 

15 

10 

6 

Otto  E.  Zaugg 

*Henry  Sheehan 

Ginger 

26 

10^ 

7 

L.  Hirshberg 

David  L.  Hirshberg 

Tommy 

16 

II 

8 

Geo.  McQuesten  Co. 

John  W.  McBurney 

Pig 
Jerry 

16 

•7 

I  I 
I  I 

9 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Finn 

Donald 
Sam 

17 

I  I 
II 

lO 

H.  F.  Brackett  &  Co. 

Wm.  H.  Webb 

Bill 

20 

I  I 

II 

H.  C.  Mitchell 

Ed.  Dillon 

Jennie 

16 

12 

12 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

David  Aiton 

Baby  No.  2 

20 

12 

13 

Maiden  Coal  Co. 

Albert  Dunn 

Xed 

20 

12 

H 

N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

nV.  E.  Williams 

Barney 

20 

12 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 
19 


Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

30    Congress    Street,    Boston. 


CLASS  I— OLD  HORSES  — Continued 
DIVISION  B 

First  Prize  :*    Silver  Medal,  ofered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 
Second  Prize  :     Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Four  Third  Prizes  of  Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so   many    "  Highly   Commended"   ribbons,  with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
nibbon 

! 

^°-°^                        OWNER'S  NAME 
Entry 

! 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years,  of 
Service 

15 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

='=John  E.  Marcoii 

Billy 

18 

H 

16 

Wellington-Wild  Coal  Co. 

-Robert  G.  Black 

Fanny 

21 

13 

17 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

George   Cobham 

Baby  No.   i 

.8 

H 

18 

The  D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

*John  J.  Magner 

Rosie 

18 

H 

19 

Christian  Greenwald 

Leo  Fitzpatrick 

Billy 

19 

H 

20 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

Wm.  B.  Lond 

Jumbo 

30 

'4 

21 

The  Barry  Bldg.  Wr'kg  Co. 

James  Sheahy 

Jack 

30 

H 

22 

Magee's  Express 

Henry  Harvender 

Bill 

30 

H 

23 

John  A.  Hedin 

Wm.  Simpson 

Patsy 

19 

15 

24 

Jackson  &  Newton  Co. 

Charles  Cheney 

Bill 

20 

15 

25 

W.  H.  Pevear  &  Co. 

^Patrick  Hughes 

Frank 

20 

15 

26 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Edward  Tew 

Duke 

20 

15 

27 

.         u-               u            u 

*Wm.  Entwistle 

Baby 

22 

16 

28 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Broderick 

Wm.  J.  Kell>- 

Tom 
Babe 

22 
17 

16 
13 

•Entitled   to   Driver"^  Badge. 


All  Good 

AND    ALL 

JoWXEfS 


jowKEifs  Chocolates 

The  Most  Popular  Bonbons  in  the  World 


]ov/KEf«5  Cocoa 


Made   of    the  Choicest  Cocoa    Beans 

Ground     Fine, —  (Nothinq     More 


)o^t(tfs  Retail  Store 

416  Washington  Street 

Four   Doors   from    Summer 


A   Beautiful    Mirrored   Shop   Where 
The      Fountain      Drinks      Are      Fine 


'    CLASS  1  — OLD  HORSES  — Continued 
DIVISION  C 

First  Prize  :      Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 
Second  Prize  :      Five  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Three  Third  Prizes  of  Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  the  Association. 
In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended"  ribbons,    with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of  No.  of 
Ribbon    Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

29 

C.  W.  Walker  Co. 

*James  F.  Walker 

Prince 

22 

'5 

2,^ 

Geo.  H.  IMatthis 

Alex.  Doherty 

Maggie 

23 

'5 

.V 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

James  McLean 

Lizzie 

20 

16 

32 

Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 

Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 

Kate 

21 

16 

33 

The  Carters  Ink  Co. 

Charles  Whyte 

Billy 

23 

16 

34 

The  Ho}t  Co. 

Geo.  B.  Hatch 

Ben 

30 

16 

35 

H.  H.  Fisher 

Philip  B.  Fisher 

Ben 

29 

16 

36 

*Theo.  H.  Fisher 

Ned 

25 

17 

37 

Jacob  Bierweiler 

'^ohn  Brown 

Kate 

23 

'7 

38 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

'Geo.  C.  Lienhard 

Major 

27 

'7 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badse. 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 


COLLECTIONS    MADE 

In  Roslindale,  Dorchester,  South  Boston,  Brookline, 
Nantasket,  Back  Bay  and  City 


TELEPHONE.    283    ROXBURY 


CITY  LAUNDRY 

C.  N.  &  F.  A.  CUNNINGHAM.  Proprietors 
82   to  98  West  Lenox  Street 


CLASS  I— OLD  HORSES  —  Continued 
DIVISION  D 

First  Prize  :  Gold  Medal,  offered  by  the  Mass.  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals. 

Second  Prize  :     Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Fred  L.  Jordan. 

Four  Third  prizes  of  Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


JJ"-  "^    ^""^                        OWNER'S  NAME 
Ribbon    Entry 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

39 
40 

Horace  W.  Eldridge 
S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Clarence  H.  Eldridge 
Walter  Lockhart 

Dick 
Tom 
Jim 

22 
25 

iS 
iS 
iS 

4' 

Walter  P.  Jones 

*Geo.  H.  Xascott 

Paddy 

29 

'9 

42 

W.  C.  Brav 

='=Xathan  Teague 

Peggy 

25 

2G 

43 

C.  B,  Smith  &  Bro. 

^Robert  F.  Atwood 

\Miite  John 

26 

2  I 

44 

Fay  Bros.  Co. 

Bernard  Phelan 

Prince 

38 

2. 

45 

Mrs.  A.  M.  Davis 

*  Edwin  P.  Hudson 

(This  driver  wiUIgive  an  exhibi- 
tion of  driving  without  reins  ) 

Flossv 
Baby' 

27 
17 

2  I 

•3 

46 

A.  E.  W^inn 

A.  E.  Winn 

Chub 

28 

22 

47 

Rudolph  Dnnkel 

R.  F.  Dunkel 

Jimmie 

30 

22 

4S 

Daniel  Cronin 

Henry  Cassidy 

Jack 

29 

25 

49 
50 

J.  B.  Smith 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Richard  Jones 
nVm.  P.  Burke 

(For  Exhibition  only) 

Sandy 

Tom 

Harry 

31 
29 
23 

26 
8 
8 

CLASS  2-CHAMPION  OLD  HORSES 

In  this  Class  Mr.  George  \V.  Harrington  offers  a  First  Prize  of  Ten  Dollars;  Mr. 
Wm.  D.  Quimby  offers  a  Second  Prize  of  Five  Dollars,  and  the  Association  offers  a  Third 
and  Fourth  Prize  of  Three  Dollars  each. 


51 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

(Won  Gold  Medal  in  igoy.) 

Harry  Hay 

Billy 

27 

20 

52 

Clogher  &  Mulrenin 

(Won  Gold  Medal  in  190S.) 

*Edw.  ^IcKenzie 

Xell 

31 

^9 

53 

Joseph  Thompson 

(Won  Gold  Medal  in  IQ06.) 

Joseph  Thompson 

Dick 

34 
36 

31 

54 

James  F.  Weir 

•^Frederick  E.  Weir 

Old  Xed 

25 

(Won  Gold  Medal  in  1905.) 

'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


ESTABLISHED    1846 


Announcement     of 

SUMMER  DELIVERY   SERVICE  OF 
OUR    SEASIDE    BRANCHES,    1910 

We  beg  to  announce  that  the  Delivery  Service  of  our  Seaside  Branches  alon.i;-  the 
North  Shore  will  include  the  following-  resorts  : 

SERVED    BY     LYNN     BRANCH 

193   Alley   Street,   Lynn.      Phone    1409 

Beach  Bluff,  Clifton,  Clifton    Heights,   Lynn,  Nahant,   Phillips  Beach  and 

SWAMPSCOTT. 

SERVED    BY    SALEM    BRANCH 
252  Bridge   Street,   Salem        Phone  720 

Beverly,  Beverly  Farms,  Devereux,  Manchester-by-the-Sea,  Marblehead, 
Marblehead  Neck,  Montserrat,  Prides,  Salem,  Salem  Willows  and  West 
Manchester,  Mass. 


COOM  ASSIES 

OXFORD 

TORMENT 

(210,377) 

(ROSEBUD) 

Selected  from  the 
HOOD    farm!  herd 

DERRY,    N      H. 

and  furnished  President 
Taft's  family  with  milk 
and  cream,  at  his  sum- 
mer home ,  Beverly, 
Mass.,  1909. 


Daily  Delivery  in  Greater  Boston  on  all  regular  Hood  Milk  Teams  and  by  Express  to  any  Address. 

H.    P.    Hood    &    Sons 

THE   LARGEST   INDEPENDENT  DAIRY  COMPANY  IN   NEW   ENGLAND 


BI.IND   TOM    IN  iqo6. 


M)   TOM    IN    1907. 


CLASS  3  — RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

This  Class  is  for  horses  once  broken  down,  and  restored  to  heahh  and  strength  by 
proper  treatment. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved  and  the  following  special  prizes  : 

First  Prize  :     Gold  Medal,  offered  by  a  "  Friend  to  Animals." 

Second  Prize  :     Silver  Medal.      Third  Prize  :     Bronze  Medal. 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

55 

Animal  Rescue  League              Edward  DeCosta             Black  Beauty 
This  mare  was  bought  from  an  expressman    in    1908 ;   very  lame, 
sore  and  thin. 

18 

56 

Earle's  Forwarding  Co.               Gene  Pooler                      Reuben 
This  horse  ran  down   after  eight  years'  work  and  was  supposed 
to  be  worthless;  was  restored  by  three  months'  rest. 

14 

57 

Earle's  Forwarding  Co.              Earle  C.  Quimby            Robbin 

This  horse    was   bought    one    year    ago,    very   thin   and  weak ; 
brought  into  condition  by  a  box  stall,  mashes,  grooming,  etc. 

12 

5S 

Easterbrook  Coal  Co.                    Fred.  Smith                      John 

This    horse    was,    two   years    ago,    in    an    emaciated    condition; 
restored  to  health    by  a  vacation  of  three  months,  and  sold  recently 
for  $245. 

12 

59 

Everett  W.  Harrington              Rupert  Banks                  Mike 

This  horse  was  bought  7  years  ago  for  $25. 

13 

60 

James  F.  Weir                             James  F.  Weir               Bess 

This  horse  was  bought  for  $75  last  fall ;  had  been  over-driven  and 
abused  ;  $300  was  recently  offered  for  her. 

9 

61 

Red  Acre  Farm                            Charles  H.  Lund             Sandy 

This  horse  was  formerly  used  by  Chief  Cheswell  in  the  Boston  Fire 
Department ;  retired,  on  account  of  injuries,  to  Red  Acre  Farm  in  1907. 

18 

62 

Red  Acre  Farm                            Wm.  F.  Hendy               Blind  Tom 
This    horse    was   bought  in   1906   for  $15,   lying   in    the   gutter, 
lame,  thin  and  sick.     He  then  weighed  1040  lbs  ;  now  weighs  1360  lbs. 

10 

The  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes 

Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals,  Brass  Shields,  Special  Prizes, 
etc.,  used  by  THE  BOSTON  WORK  HORSE  PARADE  ASSOCIA= 
TION  for  the   last  five  years   were   made   by   the 

BOSTON    BADGE    CO. 


*^^^ 

^    .             ■.      /' 

i 


We  Make  a  Specialty  of  Superior  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes,  Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals, 
Athletic  Medals,  Club  and  Class  Pins,  Banners,  Flags,  etc. 

WRITE    FOR    CATALOGS    OR    ESTIMATES 

BOSTON     BADGE     CO. 

629   Old   South    Building  294   Washington  St.,    Boston 


CLASS  4  — FIRE  DEPARTMENT 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No- of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

No  of 

Horses 

63 

City  of  Chelsea 

Elijah  E.  Smith 

Tom 
Ned 

3 

64 

City  of  Boston 

Thomas  J.  Feeley 

Bige 

2 

65 

''   *         " 

George  P.  Smith 

5 

CLASS  5  — U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  and  the  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Five  Dollars  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of  No  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


68  Charles  H.  Shepard 

69  William  George 

70  Thos.  N.  Dunican 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Charles  H.  Shepard 
William  George 
Thos.  X.  Dunican 


No.  of 
Horses 


CLASS  6 -CITIES  AND  TOWNS 
PARK   DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


71 

City  of  Boston, 

(Park    Dept.) 

Jas.  J.  O'Brion 

J 

72 

" 

*Jas.  O'Xeil 

I 

7Z 



Thos.  Connell 

2 

74 



Jas.  J.  Alelynn 

2 

75 

" 

Dennis  Daley 

2 

76 

"         " 

*  Patrick  Daley 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Our  Milk  Supply 

d.  Our  dairies  are  frequently  visited  ty  trained  inspectors  to 
secure  clean,  KealtKy  cows — well  ligkted  and  ventilated  cow- 
stables —  milk  rooms  aud  supplies  of  ice. 

CL  Oiii"  contract  witk  producers  states  that  in  case  of  tke  outbreak 
of  any  infectious  disease  at  tke  farm,  shipment  of  milk  shall  be 
stopped  and  during  the  period  of  quarantine  the  milk  kept  at  home 
w^iU  be  paid  for  by  us. 

C  Our  milk  is  transported  to  the  city  in  refrigerator  cars  m  ex- 
press trains  and  is  received  in  a  modern  plant  w^ith  every  facility 
for  the  sanitary  handling  of  milk,  viz., — machinery  for  the  cleans- 
ing of  cans  and  bottles  by  caustic  alkalies  and  steam  —  filling  of 
bottles  by  automatic  apparatus  eliminating  handling  by  men  —  lav- 
atories and  shower  baths  for  employees  —  steam  laundry  for  the 
cleansing  of  employees'  suits  —  a  chemical  laboratory  to  guard  the 
richness  of  our  milk —  a  bacteriological  laboratory  to  guard  the 
cleanliness  of  our  milk. 

CL  ^Ve  do  not  stop  with  this  but  finally  subject  our  milk  to 
Pasteurization  in  recently  perfected  apparatus  w^hich  holds  the 
milk  for  thirty  minutes  at  a  temperature  of  145  degrees  Fahrenheit. 
This  treatment  destroys  any  germs  of  disease  which  may  have 
reached  milk  in  spite  of  the  above  described  system  of  precaution. 
Pasteurizing  under  these  conditions : 

Does  not  affect  the  rising  of  cream 

Does  not  impart  any  cooked   flavor 

Does  not   change  in  any  appreciable 
w^ay  the  digestibility  of  milk. 

C  No  large  milk  supply  in  the  world  surpasses  the  protection 
ottered  by 

WHITING'S     MILK 


CLASS   7— CITIES  AND   TOWNS 
STREET   DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved.  In  this  Class  Mr.  Benjamin  W.  Wells,  formerly  Superintendent  of  Streets, 
offers  a  special  prize  of  Ten  Dollars  for  the  best  old  horse,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

77 

City  of  Boston 

(Sanitary  Div.) 

-Benj.  J.  A.  Green 

78 

"       "       " 

Richard  W.  Lanahan 

(Tliis  horse  is  21  }iears  old.) 

79 

"       "       - 

Arthur  W.  Blankenbitrg 

80 

-W.M.  F.  Blake 

81 

Edward  Alellen 

82 

*JoHx  B.  Carr 

83 



Francis  J.  Walsh 

84 

u              -             " 

'^Dennis  McGonagle 

85 

"       "       "  (   Pay.  Dept.) 

Wm.  F.  Gallagher 

86 
87 

(Bridge  Dept.) 

*JoHN  J.  Green 

(This  horse  is  17  years  old.) 

(Water  Dept.) 

='=David  Leo 

88 

"       "      ," 

Thomas  ]\Iagee 

89 

.       "       -           -         '' 

-Michael  Roxan 

90 

"       "       - 

James  AIcKenna 

91 

.       .       .           .         . 

Daniel  Hefferan 

92 

u              «              « 

James  O'Brien 

93 

«    u    «      «     « 

='=Thos.  Willlvms 

94 

"    "    - 

^Edward  Sullivan 

95 

"    "    "      -     " 

Thos.  McAulirt 

96 

"    "    " 

*AIicnAEL  Burke 

2 

97 

«           a           11                 ((              (c 

=^]\Iatiie\v  Nolan 

2 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Convincing  Reasons  Why  You  Should 
Do  Your  Shopping  in  this  Great  Store 

In  addition  to  being  Boston's  best  store  for  new  and  novel  articles^  this 
house  is  undeniably  the  best  store  for  staple  goods  of  all  kinds,  'Jlirough  our 
perfected  system  of  merchandising,^  you  -will  find  here  every  ucck  i?i  the  year 
plentiful  assortments  of  every  kind  of  merchandise  we  carry. 

OUR  PRICES  ARE  ABSOLUTELY  THE  LOWEST.  We  are 
never  undersold.  We  guarantee  the  price  of  everything  we  sell  to  be  as  low  as 
or  lower  than.^  the  same  article  can  be  bought  elsewhere  in  New  Englafid. 


OUR  GUARANTEE^  every  article  bought  here  —  no 
matter  how  low  the  price  may  bc^  carries  our  guarantee  of  satisfac- 
tion to  the  purchaser. 


Jordan  Marsh  Company 


'telephone     -     - 
M.  J.   SHEA, 


401    South  Boston 
-     -         (^^Canager 


Wilson  Tisdale  Company 


OLD  COLONY 


Working  Horses  and  Wagons 
To-Let  by  Day  or  Week    .  .  . 


46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 

SOUTH  BOSTON 


Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

MILK 
CREAM  t^^^ 
BUTTER 


FARMS  AT 
Southborough,  Mass. 


BOSTON  OFFICE 
9  Bosworth  Street 


ROSTOX     PARK    DEPART .VIf:NT,    FIRST    PRIZE. 


CLASS   8  — DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

98 

lloston  American 

Thomas  McKee 

99 

.. 

Michael  Duggan 

100 

.. 

Jas.  G.  Walker 

lOI 

•' 

John  Belyea 

102 

a                   a 

Wm.  J.  Colbert 

103 

ii                   i( 

Charles  Meier 

104 

" 

Henry  Jones 

2 

105 

u 

Geo.  LeConr 

2 

106 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

iM.  J.  Shea 

107 

u              u 

^•'Timothy  J.  O'Connor 

108 

u           . 

*John  Dal>- 

109 

.         " 

*Con.  Curtin 

no 

" 

*Tim.  C)*Connor  Jr. 

III 

u 

*John  J.  Ahern 

112 

a               (( 

^Albert  Williams 

*Entitle(l   to   Driver's  Badge. 


C.  R  HOVEY   &   CO. 

CALL     ATTENTION     TO     THEIR 

MILLINERY  AND  NEW  SHOE  DEPARTMENTS 

ALSO    THEIR     ENLARGED 

Rug,  Upholstery  and  Drapery  Department 

ALL    OF    WHICH    ARE    TO    BE    FOUND    IN    THE 

NEW    CHAUNCY     STREET    ANNEX 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

A.    E.   BLISS 

General    Superintendent 

MALDEN  Electric  Co. 

Malden  and  Melrose 
Gas  Light  Co. 


TheMorss&WhyteCo. 

Wire  Cloths 
and  Screens 

Elevator    Cars    and 
Enclosures 

FANCY  WROUGHT  IRON  AND  BRASS  GRILL  WORK 

75   to   81   Cornhill 
BOSTON 

J.  E.  Jacobs,  rianager      Tel.,  57  Haymarket 


CLASS  9 -MILK 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No  of 
Horses 

113 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

J.  W.  Powers 

114 

u 

Howard  R.  Phillips 

115 

*Geo.  W.  Swiminer 

116 

C.  B.  Robbins 

117 

- 

C.  E.  Butrick 

118 

'• 

*Joshua  Clough 

119 

*Alexander  McLean 

120 

*Phineas  Hubbard 

121 

.. 

T.  F.  Degnan 

122 

- 

*Robert  E.  Colter 

123 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Geo.  B.  Hamilton 

124 

a               (t               (( 

=^' Frederic  H.  Collins 

125 

i.                   a               a               (C 

Henry  McQuirk 

126 

" 

John  Richardson 

127 

u 

H.  A.  DeLano 

128 

" 

Roy  D.  Nelson 

129 

"                   "               "               " 

Charles  O.  Wilson 

130 

"               "               " 

Elmer  E.  Morse 

130a 

M.  Goldman 

Maurice  Yosell 

131 

H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons 

*  Michael  Power 

132 

'        ' 

Edward  G.  Gould 

133 

'        ' 

Wm.  H.  Sullivan 

134 

a        i 

*Benj.  F.  Jones 

135 

'•       *' 

Alton  Winchenback 

136 

'        ' 

Michael  Rountree 

137 

'•        ' 

'_       ' 

Fred  J.  Moriarty 

138 

"        ' 

'        * 

*J.  Leverett  Chisholm 

139 

"        * 

'        ' 

Wm.  T.  McCullough 

140 

(              a        Si           ( 

Benj.  A.  Chute 

2 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Tkos.  J.  Priest 


James  T.  Smitk 


Priest  ^  Smitk 

Boarding,    Baiting, 
Livery  and   Sale  Staple 

First  Class  Horse  Shoeing  ; 
also  Clipping  ty  Electricity 


68to74NortliamptonSt. 


Telephone  325  Roxbury 


John  M.Woods    W.  E.  Chamberlain     E.D.Walker 

Jokn  M.  Woods  y  Co. 


^^ 


WHOLESALE 


RETAIL 


HardAvood 

-^■^^  Lumber 

AIR  DRIED  and  KILN  DRIED 


SPECIALTIES 

Mahogany       White-wood       Qr.  Sycamore      Cherry 
Oak  Ash  Walnut 


223-239   Bridge    Street 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE,   MASS. 

Telephone.  Cambridge  1430 


CLASS   9  -  MILK  —  Continued 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

141 

Oak  Grove  Farm 

Michael  G.  Murphy 

142 

'' 

Herbert  C.  McAlHster 

U3 

" 

*Thos.  J.  Griffin 

144 

" 

Thos.  J.  Berrane 

145 

11 

Alfred  Boutin 

146 

" 

*  Herbert  C.  West 

147 

" 

Gilbert  V.  Smith 

148 

" 

Daniel  Cantelo 

150 

" 

*P.  J.   McDoNOUGH 

152 

" 

Frank  A.  Horgan 

153 

W.  R.  Page 

Leonard  A.  Loud 

154 

Plumer  &  Boyce 

Francis  B.  Clark 

155 

J.  B.  Watt  &  Son 

Alexander  Matheson 

156 

"     "       "'     "     " 

Jos.  A.  Watt 

157 

D.  Whiting  & 

Sons     . 

W.  G.  Lyons 

158 

u 

" 

L.  R.  Chandler 

159 

" 

" 

Neil  J.  Canney 

160 

"       " 

" 

^Joseph  Hanson 

161 

" 

« 

Wm.  A.  Greaves 

162 

" 

" 

Wm.  Nugent 

163 

"  ■    " 

<( 

*  Henry  L.  Fallon 

164 

"          "       " 

<< 

*W.  E.  Hayes 

165 

" 

" 

Geo.  Brown 

2 

166 

"          "       " 

" 

*  Clayton  E.  Everton 

2 

167 

J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 

*  Robert  C.  HezUtt 

I 

168 

'•     ••            ••          "     " 

Chas.   Soundry 

I 

169 

Richard  Cross 

.      I 

^Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 

HOUGHTON  &  BUTTON  CO. 

THE  GREAT  CASH  HOUSE 
OF  NEW  ENGLAND. 


Li^ht  Touch 


The  principle  is  that  you  can  strike  more 
blows  in  a  day  with  a  tack  hammer 
than  with  a  sledge — so  with  Monarch 
Light  Touch.  Your  operator  can  produce  more  work 
than  with  the  ordinary  heavy  workin**  machine. 

Let  us  show  you  about  this  and  other  Monarch  outpui-increasing  features 

THE  MONARCH  TYPEWRITER  COMPANY 
67  MILK  STREET,   (Equitable  Building),  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Executive  Offices:  SOOBroadway.  New  York 


CLASS    10  — BAKERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deseived. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

I/O 

J.  W.  Alden 

Edward  E.  Morse 

171 

" 

Frank  G.  Sargent 

172 

' 

u 

Leonard  R.  Clark 

^73 

' 

u 

Fred  J.  Beauchamp 

174 

a              u 

B.  G.  Caine 

175 

' 

" 

Geo.  J.  L.  Henreux 

176 

' 

Wm.  T.  Currant 

177 

Bernard  B.  Marshall 

178 

w    .. 

Louis  H.  Lipshultz 

179 

G.  H.  Bent  Co. 

^Charles  A.  Griggs,  Jr. 

180 

Henry  Blewett  &  Son 

Joseph  C.  Gaudet 

181 

" 

Dana  E.    Higgin 

182 

Drake  Bros.  Co. 

Arthur  J.  Jackson 

183 

u 

Geo.  B.  Milliman 

184 

" 

Andrew  M.  Kellough 

185 

.f              a 

*Fred  W.  Gardner 

186 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Cu. 

*Lewis  E.  Bishop 

187 

"       ' 

"        " 

William  Joyce 

188 

u           . 

"        " 

Norman  D.  Conrad 

189 

"     ' 

(<        (< 

xAifred  Morris 

190 

U               ( 

((        (( 

Robert  K.  Patterson 

191 

u            . 

-((       It 

*James  J.  Welch 

192 

"     ' 

u       u 

W.  W.  Lewis 

193 

"     ' 

"    " 

Alonzo  L.  Wyman 

194 

"     ' 

"    " 

Patrick  Wood 

2 

195 

u          u       u 

*Wm.  H.  \'aughn 

- 

196 

J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Ferguson  Co. 

-Thomas  C.  Hunt 

2 

197 

a    u    a    u       a                        ..              t( 

*  James  A.  Powers 

2 

198 

li     a     a     u        a                         a               <; 

*David  Smith 

2 

199 

0.  B.  Gihnan 

*Henry  McGowan 

I 

200 

"     " 

Harry  Tanck 

I 

201 

W.  N.  Jenkins 

Robert  J.  Durkee 

I 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


E  J.  BABCOCK 
€oal  and  Charcoal 

47    SHERWOOD    STREET,    ROXBURY 


TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  368 


ELDR.IDGE 
BAKERCO. 


HIGH  GRADE 

FOOD  product: 


WHO  LESALE 

GROCERS 

2 13  and  2 15  St*ate  St.,  Bostoi\ 


Compliments 
of 

ITe 

ATLANTIC 
WORKS 

-5  ^■^•a<^:&&  :§:-§^K?:^-^i3^«S^«§;&&  i9'^-55- 


CLASS    U— LAUNDRIES 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved 


No  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No- of 
Horses 


202 

202A 

202B 

202C 

202D 

202E 

202F 

202G 

203 

204 

205 

206 

207 

208 

209 

210 

211 

212 

213 

214 

215 


Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 
Allston  Hand  Laundry 


City  Laundry  Company 


Donald  ^L  Eraser 

Ideal  Towel  Supply  Co. 
Marine  Towel  Sujjply  Co. 
Trimount  Laundrv  Co. 


*John  B.  Fay 

B.  Phillips 

Wm.  Myott 
*John  Tehan 
*S.  J.  Dickson 

S.  Mansfield 
*J.  J.  Dale 

J.  MacDonald 
*Maurice  L  Daniels 
"^^ James  P.  O'Brien 

Wm.  W.  Paterson 
*Joseph  Farrell 
*Henry  K.  Barnard 
*  Frank  H.  Ames 
*H.  F.  Upham 

S.  J.  RiCHARDSOX 

Joseph   INIcGilvary 
Edward  IMcGilvary 
'■'Waldo  P.  Brazier 
■■■'Patrick  J.  Hennessey 
John  Pasalacque 


Entitl 


Driver's  Bado^e. 


COMPLIMENTS 

-OF-  = 

H  ifrienb 


Lynn  Office  and  Warehouse,  117  Pleasant  Street 

The 
jDrockway-binitn 

Corporation 


Doors,  Windows  and  Blinds, 

Mantels,  Columns  and 

Stair  Work 

15  nV asnmgton  Street 

(NORTH) 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  connection 


Compliments  of 

Ike 

STAR 

Bre-wmg 

Company 

CLASS   12  — DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

217 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Joseph  DeCos.a 

2 

218 

S.  H.  Appleman 

Geo.  Willinsky 

I 

219 

Estabrook  &  Eaton  Co. 

*Chas.  E.  Rogers 

I 

220 

Louis  Jeselsohn 

*Henry  McKenzie 

r 

221 

The  Kelly  Peanut  Co. 

Frank  J.  Donlavey 

I 

222 

u 

Richard  Powell 

I 

22Z 

A.  Leuthy  &  Co. 

*John  C.  Sawbridge 

I 

224 

R.  Marston  &  Co. 

Forest  R.  Spinney 

I 

225 

i(                      11        u        « 

Eric  A.  Starck 

I 

226 

u                      a        a         11 

Raymond  E.  Valiquet 

I 

227 

Penn  the  Florist 

]Maurice  Clancey 

2 

228 

Hyman  Rosenberg 

J.  Gulwin 

z 

229 

Union  Steam  Sponging 
Works 

Arthur  M.  O'Brien 

I 

230 

" 

James  Crowley 

I 

231 

A.  P.  Willey 

*Oran  A.  Becker 

I 

'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


BAY  STATE  FUEL  COMPANY 

A  Consolidation  cf  the  Old  Firm    of    RICHARDSON    &    BACON    with    BAKER-HUNNEWELL    COMPANY 


^/^fBRlOGV 


€odl '"« mood 


GENERAL    OFFICE    AND    WHARVES 


157  Main  Street,  Cambridge 


Branch  Office  in  Boston,   127  CAMBRIDGE  STREET 

BRANCH     OFFICES     IN     CAMBRIDGE 

624  Mass.  Ave.,  Central  St.  1326  Mass.  Ave.,  Harvard  Sq. 


ESTABLISHED    1841 


E.   B.   BADGER 
&  SONS  CO. 


J^  J.  Ji 

Coppersmiths  and 
Sheet  metal  (Uorkers 

Nos.  63  to  75  PITTS  STREET 
BOSTON 


TELEPHONE    1710    ROXBURY 


OAK 

GROVE 

FARM 

ALDEN  BROS.  CO. 

•3*  «^  «^ 

WHOLESALE    AND    RETAIL 

milk  and  Cream 

1171    TREMONT     STREET 
BOSTON 


CLASS    J3  — GAS  AND  ELECTRIC  COMPANIES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

232 

Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

*Thomas  J.  Greene 

^33 

U             u                 a 

*Fred  E.  Seward 

234 

*Robert  E.  Dunbar 

^35 

"                                     "              "                 " 

*Patrick  J.  McCartan 

-'36 

"                                      "              •'                 '  < 

^Patrick  Kiley 

237 

■^ 

*Norman  McDonald 

238 

*Thomas  Kiley 

-239 

East  Boston  Gas  Co. 

Elma  V.  Newton 

240 

East  Boston  Gas  Co. 

(Chelsea  Div.) 

*Joseph  M.  Riley 

241 

"         "         "         "          " 

John  E.  Doughty 

242 

u              «              .<              u 

*G.  A.  Logan 

243 

''            "            "            "            " 

^Albert  H.  Roberts,  Jr. 

244 

"        " 

Laurie  O.  Fielding 

245 

"          "          "          " 

^Patrick  J.  Sharkey_ 

246 

Maiden  Electric  Co. 

John  Silliker 

247 

"             "           " 

Patrick  Farrah 

248 

"           " 

Albert  McDonald 

249 

u 

Frank  Rierdon 

250 

"            "          " 

Owen  Donohue 

251 

a                  u 

*Daniel  Foley 

252 

Maiden  &  Melrose 

Gas  Light  Co. 

Cornelius  Callaghan 

253 

it               a               a               u               u 

John  Sullivan 

254 

"               "               "               •'               " 

^Patrick  Griffin 

255 

«              «              u 

Daniel  J.  Foley 

256 

i.              "              "              ''              " 

*  Jeremiah  O'Connor 

257 

Suburban  Gas  &  Elec.  Co. 

Wm.  Chisholm 

258 

"                "     "         "     " 

James  Mann 

259 

"                "     "         "     " 

A.  R.  Nicholson 

(This  horse  is  29  years  old.) 

260 

(<                                (I          i(                  i(          is 

Paul  P.  Tucker 

'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


THE 


ROESSLE  BREWERY 


PREMIUM    LAGER   BEER 

IN    WOOD    OR    BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  highest  type    of    Honesty    and  Excellence,  considering  Quality,   Age,  Substance, 
Purity  and  Aroma,  and  is  Absolute  Perfection. 

ESTABLISHED     1846 


OFFICE,     BREWERY    AND     BOTTLING     DEPARTMENT 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE    -    BOSTON 


P.  O.  Box    1284.  Telephone,   1065  Rich. 

D.  S.  WOODBERRY  &  CO. 

Forwarder 

Eastern  Steamship  Co. 

Portland  Division 

326   Commercial   St.,   Boston 

Opposite   Union   Wharf 
Baggage    Transferred    to    all    Points. 


Boston  Transfer  Co. 
Truckmen 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 

Telephone    Richmond  3  BOSTON 


American    Coal 
Company 

376   Albany  Street 


TELEPHONE  BOSTON 

TREMONT    335  UW^IV^l^ 


REVERE  HOUSE 

Bowdoin   Square 

BOSTON 

R.  S.  HARRISOM,  Proprietor 


CLASS    U  — PROVISIONS 
LIGHT  HORSES 

The  JuJges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNERS  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


John  F.  Barr_\- 

J.  B.  Brennan 

Felix  L.  Brust 

John  J.  Burns 

Franklin  County  Creamery 

W.  H.  Lerned  &  Sons 

James  J.  Lynch 

Harry  W.  Murphy,  Adm. 

L.  E.  JMurphy  Estate 
Shattuck  &  Jones 


261 
262 
263 
264 
265 
266 
267 
268 
269 
270 
271 
272 


274  Geo.  F.  Stodder 

275  Toomey  &  Ormon 

276  Julius  W'einstein 


David  J.  Barry 

Francis  Craven 
*Thos  J.  Tighe 

John  J.  Burns 

John  F.  McLaughlin 

Fred  S.  Douglas 
*Mathew  D.  Lynch 

Henry  T.  Leary 
*Frederick  DeCorsey 

Irving  C.  Gardner 

John  W.  Bowker 
*James  A.  Doherty 
'"Geo.  F.  Seamon 

(This  driver  has  won    a  Blue  Ribbon  in  [every 
Parade  and  receives  a  Gold  Badge  this  year.) 

Fred  R.  Blake 
Frank  -Hoar 
'^Samuel  Weinstein 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


W.  p.  Whittemore  Company 

||av  auMSrain 


East  Boston  Gas  Co. 

(CHELSEA    DIVISION) 
8    Everett   Avenue  Chelsea,    Mass. 

rTeadquarters  ror  the    Latest 
Devices    m    Gas   Appliances 

=-  OF  ALL  KINDS  

TELEPHONES:  OFFICE  HOURS: 

Office CKelsea     71  8  A.   M.   to   6   P.   M. 

Office CKclsea     19  SATURDAYS 

Works CKelsea  327  8  A.   M.   to   8   P.   M. 


CLASS    15  -  PROVISIONS 
HEAVY  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

^o  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

277 

A.  J.  Bartlett 

*Jeremiah  J.  Donovan 

278 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 

*NoRRis  W.  Currier 

279 

Chapin  &  Adams 

Chas.  W.  Colley 

280 

" 

*Wm.  S.  Wilson 

281 

" 

Benj.  H.  Waugh 

282 

E.  L.  Chase 

*Thos.  J.  MacDonald 

283 

Geo.  W.  Clatur  Co. 

Nathan  D.  Hayward 

284 

W.  A.  Clement 

^Eugene  A.  Grant 

285 

Angelo  Cortez 

Angelo  Cortez 

286 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

John  J.  Higgins 

287 

" 

J.  F.  Shea 

288 

« 

Harry  A.  Breen 

289 

u 

Joseph  C.  Hallfelder 

290 

i(                ii                i< 

Charles  Mclnnes 

291 

" 

Michael  F.  Hoyle 

292 

•• 

John  F.  Howard 

293 

Walter  J.  Dolan 

James  Welch 

294 

Garason  &  Waterman 

Hyman  Snsman 

295 

The  W.  M.  McDonald  Co. 

Joseph  Lanzilla 

296 

Pasqtiali  Di  Napoli 

Orazio  De  Napoli 

297 

a               u               11 

Carmen  Vitale 

298 

Wm.  P.  Preble 

Wm.  M.  White 

299 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co 

Patrick  A.  Quinn 

300 

Rhodes  Bros.  Co. 

Allan  R.  Lewis 

301 

W.  G.  &  H.  C.  Russell 

Harold  H.  Leonard 

302 

li             <(             (( 

Geo.  A.  Daley 

303 

.i                     a 

Fred  J.  Crepeau 

304 

Patrick  Shea 

*M.  J.  Shea 

305 

Harry  D.  Smith 

Harry  D.  Smith 

306 

John  Wright 

John  Wright 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


j.ii.y.8.F[RGysoN(;o, 


THE     LEADING 

BAKERS 

OF  NEW  ENGLAND 


Compliments 
of 


853    ALBANY    ST. 
BOSTON     -    MASS. 


HOTEL 

BUCKMINSTER 


Cor.     BEACON     ST. 


COMMONWEALTH  AVE, 


R.  A.  KENNETT 

For  Over  41  Years 

WE    HAVE    BEEN 

TRUCKMAN 

MAKERS    OF 

AND 

GOOD 

FORWARDER 

HARNESS 

AND 

«i$^^^:& 

COLLARS 

6  FULTON  STREET 
BOSTON 

JAMES  FORGIE'S  SONS 

19  and   20   South    Market   St. 
Albany  St.  and  Mass.  Avenue 

Telephone,    30    Richmond 

BOSTON 

CLASS   16 -CONFECTIONERS 

Tae  Juiges  miy  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

307 

M.  Frediani  &  Sons 

John  Frediani 

I 

308 

« 

Louis    Frediani 

I 

309. 

Hazen   Confectionery  Co. 

Thos.  W.  Tobin 

I 

310 

McDonald-Weber  Co. 

Geo.  Harmon 

I 

311 

.. 

*Joseph  Pingree 

2 

312 

The  Three  Millers  Co. 

*John  W.  Phipps 

I 

313 

Geo.  E.  Triantafel 

Theo.  N.  Parnora 

I 

314 

N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

*J.  H.  McCall 

I 

315 

a                           a                        (( 

Herbert  Oakes 

I 

316 

'•                                        <l                                  St 

*Warren  E.  Davis 

I 

317 

" 

*WaIter  E.  Beltis 

2 

318 

'•                         It                     a 

*Ernest  H.  Brown 

2 

319 

'•                        "                     « 

*J.  H.  F.  Miller 

2 

320 

'•                  ^      «                     it 

*W.  T.  Seymour 

2 

321 

"                        «                     « 

*Bartley  M.  Roe 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Compliments   of 


B  Jfricnb 


WHARVES 

CRAIGIE  S  BRIDGE.  E.CAMBRIDGE 
34  WARREN  AVE  CHARLESTOWN 
I49MEDF0RD5TCHARLEST0WN 


/^  STEAM 
DOMESTIC\ 

BRANCH  OFFICES  " 
129  INMAN  ST.  CAMBRIDGE 
UNION  SQUARE  SOMERVILLE 
OILMAN  SQUARE  SOMERVILLE 
226  MAIN  ST.  CHARLESTOWN 
541  MAIN  ST  CHARLESTOWN 


CLASS    17  — GROCERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.of 
Ribbon 

No.of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

2,22 

Wesley  J.  Furbush 

Douglas  D.  Furbush 

?>^2, 

L.  M.  Akers 

Wm.  F.  O'Brien 

324 

Bain  Bros.  Co. 

*Jas.  A.  Fitzgerald 

2 

325 

J.  A.  Bowman 

*Geo.  Farnam 

326 

Burke  &  Co. 

Albert  H.  Savage 

2>^7 

Eklridge  Baker  Co. 

Con  Regan 

328 

u 

*John  Dimond 

329 

it                   it           tl 

~^=Wm.  Stewart 

330 

Frank  G.  George,  Sr. 

Frank  George,  Jr. 

331 

J.  T.  Glines  Co. 

James  Boyd 

ZZ2 

H.  A.  Johnson  Co. 

Luther  Stevens 

?,zz 

" 

John  F.  Murphy 

334 

Martin  W.  Kelly 

Martin  W.  Kelly 

335 

J.  E.  Moran 

Wm.  J.  Connelly 

ZZ^^ 

McNally  Bros. 

Edward  F.  McNally 

Z2>7 

P.  Pastene  &  Co.,  Inc. 

Benine  Terrichano 

338 

a           u 

*Joseph  B.  Basso 

339 

u 

*Angelo  Serino 

340 

\y.  S.  Quimby  Co. 

Peter  F.  Trainor 

341 

Alfred  Scaramelli  &  Co. 

Jeo.  Peirano 

342 

Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 

*Wm.  H.  Carter 

343 

H.  G.  Shaneck 

John  A'.  Kelleher 

344 

G.  W.  Spaulding 

Wm.  Eaton 

345 

A.  X.  Swallow  &  Co. 

Lyman  R.  Mortensen 

346 

A'.  Tassinari  &  Co. 

Prisno  Alberghino 

347 

P.  Terrile 

Joseph  Stiniola 

348 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Wm.  L.  Wholey 

349 

"              "           " 

Arthur  C.  Zwicker 

- 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


TELEPHONE 


Shattuck  &  Jones 

i:STABLISIIEI)   1850 

128     FANEUIL    HALL 
MARKET 


PKENNUr&^ERBURYftMPANY 


^,,  JElectric,  CAS  onA  Oil. 


'SiJsly'3?Ji„=Bostoiv.  Mass^ 


Direct  Line  to  Worcester 

Passenger  and  Special  Car  Service 


Headquarters:      77    Kingston  St.,   Boston 

TELEPHONE.  OXFORD  1278 


compliments  of 

H  jfiienb 


CLASS    1 7  —  GROCERS  —  Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

350 

Geo.  W.  Wood 

Geo.  R.  Allen 

I 

351 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Geo.  Brownell 

2 

352 

..■ 

*James  De  Cousey 

3 

353 



*M.  McGreevey 

3 

354 

•• 

A.  B.  Leighton 

3 

355 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

*Joseph  A.  Garland 

I 

356 

u 

*Llewellyn  Knowles 

2 

357 

<(              a           u 

*John  W.  Murphy 

2 

358 

" 

Clarence  H.  Jones 

2 

359 

"           " 

Albert  Goodrich 

4 

360 

"            u 

^Daniel  J.  Singleton 

4 

361 

David  Bennett 

4 

362 

" 

*Timothy  Driscoll 

4 

CLASS   18— SIX-HORSE  TEAMS 

First  Prize  :     Silver  Medal,  with  Five  Dollars  and  Bronze  Medal  for  driver. 
Second  Prize  :     Certificate,  with  Five  Dollars  for  driver. 

To  the  remaining  entries  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved,  with 
Three  Dollars  for  the  driver. 


3(^3 

National  Fire  Proofing 

Co. 

George  Ganimell 

6 

364 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Patrick  Donahue 

6 

365 

U                    ((               (( 

Thomas  Cargill 

6 

366 

Walworth  Mfg.  Co. 

*John  Ahern 

6 

367 

«             ((       « 

*Wm.  Henry  Glancy 

6 

'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


Wheeler,   McElveen   and   Cavanagh 
Horse  Co. 


COMBINATION  SALE  STABLE 


Buyers  will  find  constantly  on  hand  a  large  assortment  of  every  class  of  hoise  at 
lowest  prices. 

Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday  at  Combination  Sale  Stables 
at  I  0  o'clock,  A.  M. 

All  horses  warranted  as  represented  or  money  refunded. 

Accommodations  for  over  300  horses. 

243  and  245  Friend  St.,  Boston 


Near  North  Union  Station. 


Telephone,  505  Haymarket 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 

Hunt-Spiller 

MANUFACTURING 
CORPORATION 


The  pure,  high 
grade,  scientili- 
cally  blended  cocoa 
made  by  Walter 
Baker  &  Co.  Ltd., 
and  identified  by 
the  trade-mark  of 
the  Chocolate  Girl, 
acts  as  a  gentle 
stimulant  and  in- 
vigorates and  cor- 
rects the  action  of 
the  digestive  or- 
gans, furnishing  the  body  with 
some  of  the  purest  elements  of 
nutrition. 

A  beautifully  illustrated  book- 
let containing  a  great  variety  of 
recipes  for  home  made  candies 
and    dainty    dishes,  sent    free. 

WALTER  BAKER  &  Co.  Ltd. 

DORCHESTER,  MASS. 

Established  1780 


CLASS    19  — MISCELLANEOUS 


The  J  Lid 

ges  may  award  such  ribbons,  t  irst,  beco 

nd,  or  ihird,  as  they  deem  to  be  ( 

Reserved. 

No-of 
Ribbon 

No-of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

368 

S.  K.  Abbott  Co. 

John  Redmond 

369 

Bay  State  Distilling-  Co. 

Thos.  W.  Sheehan 

370 

Havelock  Churchill 

Thos.  J.  Timmony 

371 

W.  Bowman  Cutter 

Daniel  J.  Johnson 

2>72 

B.  F.  Keith 

^Maurice  F.  Flynn 

Z7Z 

A.  A.  Lemay 

Alphonse  A.  Lemay 

374 

James  A.  McAuley 

John  J.   Sullivan 

375 

Simon  Padover 

Philip  J.  Aronberg 

376 

Charles  H.  Perry 

Eugene  F.  Robie 

i77 

.              u 

Edward  Lane 

2 

378 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

*j\Ielville  Dickie 

2 

379 

<.          u 

='^John  T.  Stewart 

2 

380 

u                  ii           a 

James  Blowers 

I 

381 

"            " 

Alfred  J.  Goddard 

2 

382 

"                   "            " 

Charles  C.  Grover 

2 

■Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Compliments  of 


Che  Carter's  Ink  Company 


OF  EVERY  KINB. 
Implements.       ^^^^=, 
Machines.  "^2^==^ 
Woodenware. 


JO! 


(iimcorporatcd) 
51  AND  92    NORTM  MARKET  STREET.  BOSTON. 


J^Yim/.vJi es-  ^  tppro J -od  J:ntploye(ts. 
Mercantile,  ^^rJcuItuml.  JlorficuUural. 

TEUEPHOIME   BICH.  IGGO 


R.  C.  TOOMEY 


GEO.  G.  ORMON 


TOOMEY  &  ORMON 

Groceries,  Provisions,  Poultry, 
Fresh  Fish,  Vegetables 

48  CRESCEN  \  AVE.  985  DORCHESTER  AVE. 

Telephone  642-1  Telephone  642-3 

DORCHESTER,  MASS. 


Our  Motto.    The  Very  Best  of  Everything:. 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

London  Harness  Company 

JOHN  HANCOCK  BUILDING 


176  Devonshire  and  27  to  29  Federal  Streets 


CLASS  20  — MANUFACTURERS 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of            No.  of 
Ribbon       1     Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

383 

Atwood  &  McManns 

^Frederick  W.  Holy 

I 

384 

a 

='=John  W.  Luzzato 

2 

385 

u 

*Thomas  Barrett 

2     . 

386 

u 

*Edward  W.  Riley 

2 

3S7 

" 

Wm.  Argy 

2 

388 

a               ((                  Ki 

Joseph  I.  Cronin 

2 

389 

" 

*Edgar  N.  Bryson 

2 

390 

" 

*Wm.  H.  Bryson 

2 

391 

- 

^Oliver  H.  Marion 

2 

392 

a               <(                   « 

*John  A.  Campbell 

2 

393 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

*John  Thomas 

I 

394 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Patrick  O'Brien 

I 

395 

<<                 a                .'(       a 

''"'Cornelius  Ahern 

I 

396 

"       " 

*William  Kenney 

I 

397 

Fearing  Whiton  &  Co.,  Inc. 

Jeremiah  J.  Alahoney 

I 

398 

Flash  Chemical  Co. 

Patrick  E.  Burke 

I 

399 

James  Holland 

*Henry  Bateman 

I 

400 

Jackson  &  Newton  Co. 

Dana  L.  Walsh 

2 

401 

Hunt-Spiller  Alfg.  Corp. 

Thomas  Melady 

I 

402 

<<               ii         (( 

*Richard  P.  O'Brien 

I 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


C.  BRIQHAM  CO. 

WHOLESALE   AND   RETAIL   DEALERS   IN 


/Ibilk,  Cvcam  anb  Butter 


158  Massachusetts  Avenue 

CAHBRIDQE,    MAS5. 


Telephones,  262  and  263  Cambridge 


-—  THIRTY-THIRD  YEAR  — ^* 

Helping  Men  to  Help  Themselves 

BOSTON  INDUSTRIAL  HOME 

INCORPORATED 

Corner  Davis  Street  and  Harrison  Avenue 

COAL  and  WOOD 

We  deliver  anywhere,  in  any  quantity,  at  Lowest  Prices 

Ever)2  ©rbet  flDeans  IRelief  to  the  Ipoor. 


Teleplione  658  Tremont  OLIVER  C.  ELLIOT,  Superintendent 


CLASS  20  —  MANUFACTURERS  —  Continued 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No- of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No- of 
Horses 


403 

The  George  James  Co. 

John  J.  Rooney 

I 

404 

Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

Bernard  Fox 

I 

405 

i(                        a              (I 

John  J.  Silligan 

2 

406 

New  England  Bedding  Co. 

Robert  Martell 

I 

407 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

Frank  Catarras 

I 

408 

u           u           u 

*Richard  R.   Brinkert 

2 

409 

u          u          u        . 

*John  J.  Griffin 

2 

410 

" 

*Timothy  J.  Harrington 

2 

411 

ii 

James  J.  Hall 

2 

412 

u 

Edward  P.  Hicks 

2 

413 

F.  W.  Toothaker 

Edward  L.  Murphy 

I 

414 

Sylvester  Tower  Co. 

Daniel  A.  AIcDonald 

2 

415 

Nathaniel  Tufts  Meter  Co. 

Thomas  Murphy 

1 

416 

Union  Glass  Co. 

*John  J.  Brady 

I 

417 

Walworth  Mfg.  Co. 

Thomas  J.  Gantley 

1 

418 

u 

Frank  A.  Bryant 

I 

419 

u 

Dennis  Duggan 

2 

420 

^Andrew  Johnson 

2 

421 

=^James  Barry,  2nd 

2 

422 



Michael  :\IcCartby 

2 

423 

*Timothy  Ahern 

2 

424 

" 

*Michael  O'Neil 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


J.  W.  McENANY, 

14  FULTON  STREET, 
BOSTON. 


TELEPHONE,  612  RICHMOND 


United  Basket  Co. 

BASKETS 
STRAWBERRY  CRATES,   ETC. 

16  Fulton  Place,  Boston 


CLASS  21  — BOTTLERS  AND  BREWERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No- of 
Horses 

425 

Wm.  Albrecht 

Edward  Farrell 

2 

426 

"                " 

Charles  C.  Farrell 

2 

427 

C.  Berry  &  Co. 

Wm.  W.  Borns 

428 

li                      a 

Cornelius  Kelleher 

429 

u 

*John  J.  Cotter 

430 

"                      " 

*J.  J.  Murphy 

431 

Abraham  Berkman  &  Co. 

Albert  Rosenberg 

432 

Filippo  Bruno  Co. 

S.  Bruno 

433 

i(                    a              a 

Joseph  Rocco 

434 

"                    "              " 

John  Moshillo 

435 

C.  Capillo  &  Co. 

Dominick  Capillo 

436 

u                       u 

Jack  Forgie 

437 

John  F.  Concannon 

Patrick  T.  O'Brien 

438 

Doherty  &  Daly 

^Joseph  H.  Dohert} 

439 

li                    a 

Michael  Daly 

440 

Joseph  Gahm  &  Son 

'^Frederick  I.  Thomas 

2 

441 

li             It           li 

Harry  A.  Melendy 

2 

442 

li             ii           11 

*Chas.  W.  Melendy 

2 

443 

11 

*  Michael  J.  Anglin 

2 

444 

William  J.  Higgins  &  Co. 

*  Frank  J.  Higgins 

445 

11 

*Dominick  F.  Lally 

446 

'  F.  J.  McCarthy  k  Co. 

*M.  H.  Burke 

447 

G.  Rothfuss  &  Co. 

John  Klein 

448 

Gabriel  Stabile 

Gabriel  Romano 

449 

Herman  Wolf 

Chas.  W.  Wolf 

450 

Star  Brewing  Co. 

William  Dinneen 

451 

li 

Peter  Maguire 

452 

a 

Edward  O'Brien 

2 

453 

a 

^Cornelius  Crowley 

2 

454 

11 

Thomas  McCarth}- 

2 

455 

11 

*Thos.  Comer 

2 

456 

" 

Thos.  Griffin 

2 

457 

li 

*Peter  Clasby 

2 

458 

11 

*James  McNeill 

2 

459 

" 

James  O'Brien 

2 

460 

li                  11               <{ 

John  A.  Morehouse 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


{ 


XTRAVIM  FEED  MOLASSES 

keeps  the  stock  in  a  healthy  condition. 
It  lielps  assimilate  other  foods,  and 
ciures  indigestion.  It  produce*  a  glossy 
coat.  It  -will  eradicate  -worms.  Ask 
your  grocer  or  grain  dealer  for  XTRA- 
VIM, or  send  for  inf orma-  .  »  ^^  |^  . 
tion  and  valuable  book  ^''^^  _  '  <$^^ 
on  the  discovery  and  ^  _^  ;/•#!*/> 
use  of  molasses  as 
applied  to  stock. 
BE  SUUE  TO  SEE  THIS    ^i,MOLASS£S i.' 


GEO.  McQUESTEN  CO. 

Hard  Pine^^^ 
Oak  Lumber 

Oregon  Pine  and  Hackmatack  Knees 

27  KILBY  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


Docks,  Yards  and  Mill  at 
170  Border  St.,  East  Boston,  Mass. 


Walworth  Mfg.  Co. 

Makers   of 

Ubc  (3enuine  Stillson  Mrencb 

Walworth   Gate  Valves  Walmanco  Flanges 

Flanged  Fittings  Drums    and    Pipe    Bends 

Brass  and  Iron  Valves  and   Fittings 

Materials  for  High   Pressure    Power    Plants 

Tools   for  Steam   and  Waster    Fitters 


GENERAL  OFFICES: 


132  Federal  St.,  Boston,  U.  S.  A. 


NEW  YORK 
Park  Row  Building 


SAN  FRANCISCO 
Monadnock    Building 


CLASS  22  — FURNITURE    MAKERS  AND    MOVERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

461 

Caldwell  Furniture  Co. 

Charles  Powell 

I 

462 

u 

Daniel   Sliea 

2 

4^>3 

T.  P.  Coleman  &  Co. 

Horace  R.  Johnson 

2 

4^'4 

u 

Wm.  E.  Saunders 

2 

465 

Arthur  Freeman 

Arthur  L.  Freeman 

466 

James  F.  Grad\- 

James  F.  Grady 

467 

Jackson  Caldwell  &  Co. 

John  J.  Donovan 

468 

Samuel  H.  Jacobson 

Samuel  H.  Jacobson 

469 

J.  R.  Jones 

William  Brown 

470 

Wm.  Miner 

471 

Chas.  Hudson 

472 

A.  Lowenstein  Sons,  Inc. 

.Alax  Hillson 

473 

Thomas  McDowell 

*John  Bronkhorst 

474 

William  J.  Mcintosh 

Wm.  P.  McGaffigan 

475 

u 

Frank  Kane 

476 

Whitney  J.  Tingley 

Richard  Fusona 

2 

'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


piaM  Coal  Company 


¥  ¥¥¥ 

228   PLEASANT    STREET 

telephone,  494  anJ  495 


D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

TRUCKMEN 

Light>  and  Heavy  Teaming 
45    ATLANTIC    AVENUE 

Telephone  Richmond  92S 

Oh!  See  Who's  Here! 

The  concern  that  moves  more  Safes, 
Office  Furniture  and  Machinery  than 
any  other  concern  in  Boston. 

"The  Do  It  Now  Teamsters" 


YOULDEN,  SMITH  &  HOPKINS 
sn  Atlantic  Avenue     :     Boston,  Mass. 

Telephones  Main  134,  135,  3639 


Nortkampton  Street 
Veterinary  Hospital 

SboeinG  Jforgc 

CRONON  &"  FOSS 

BOSTON  TelepKone  No.  1  Tremont 


J.   A.  MARSH 
COAL    CO. 


38-40  Park  Street 

SOMERVILLE 


Telephone  Somerville  319 


Telephone,  112  South  Boston 

BOSTON  FLAG  POLE  CO. 

Dealers  in  Spruce  and  Cedar  Poles 

SPARS,  TENT,  FLAG,  PIKE  and  BEAN  POLES,  and 

POLES  FOR  RUSTIC  FENCES 

Lignumvitae  Trucks,  Gilt  Balls  and  Halyards 

169  Broadway  Extension    ::    South  Boston 

Near  Dorchester  Avenue 

Dokerty    ^    Daly 

Successors  to   Jonn  Campoell 

BOTTLERS  OF 
Mineral  Waters, 

SODA  FOUNTAINS       rri  • 

A  SPECIALTY  1  onics,  etc. 


40-42   Oneida   Street,   Boston,  Mass. 


Tel.  1487-1  Tremont 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

J.H.Richardson 

Cosmopolitan   Boai'diug 
and  Baitino'  Stable 


Corner  PITTS  and    SOUTH    MARGIN    STS. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 
Stock  Farm,  Andover,  Mass. 


CLASS  23  — MULES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No  of 
Mules 

477 

United  States  Army 

(Fort  Banks) 

Byrl  Myers 

2 

478 

J.  R.  Jones 

Charles  Franklin 

I 

479 

Oak  Grove  Farm 

Geo.  Donlon 

2 

CLASS  24  — HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAMS 

ro.  of 
Horses 

480 

Fulton  O'Brion 

*C.  Jesson 

I 

481 

u 

*DanieI  Smiddy 

1 

482 

((              <( 

*E.  J.  Murphy 

2 

483 

((              « 

■-Philip  Kelly 

2 

484 

W.  M.  Robinson 

M.  F.  Connolly 

2 

485 

Shepard  &  Harding 

*Wm.  J.  Keen 

I 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


WHARF   AND   MAIN   OFFICE 


496  First  Street :  South  Boston 


JOHN    A.    STETSON,        -        -        -        -        President  and  General  Manager 
ROBERT    D.    HALL, Treasurer 


R.  H.  WHITE  CO. 

OFFER    COMPLETE     STOCK    OF 

Men  s  Clotking 

^  SKocs,   Hats      and     Furnisliings  ^ 

At  the  Loudest  Prices  i/i  Boston  (hialitv  Considered 


CLASS  25  — LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved, 


No  of 
Ribbon 

Ne.of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

486 

James  F.  Barry 

William   A.   Keogh 

I 

487 

Curtis  &  Pope  Lumber  Co 

*Thomas  Goode 

I 

48S 

;(                   «(               ti            u 

*Thomas  H.  Hicks 

I 

489 

((                   a               (I            u 

Herbert  Hall 

2 

490 

4(                            U                      l4                  (( 

*Fred  Morse 

2 

491 

((                   ((               a            ti 

Patrick  J.  McCarthy 

2 

492 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

James  A.  White 

I 

493 

" 

\Xm.  H.  Sheehan 

I 

494 

U                             (I                     cc 

Joseph  F.  Sylvester 

I 

495 

" 

Theo.  S.  Desmond 

2 

496 

. 

William  Burke 

2 

497 

Howard  Bros. 

*JoHN  Howard 

I 

498 

P.  S.  Huckins  Co. 

Frank  J.   Culbert 

I 

499 

ii                    a              ct 

Frank  L.  Libby 

2 

500 

Interstate  Lumber  Co. 

Wm.  A.  McCuish 

I 

501 

Geo.  H.  Jennings 

*Warren  A.  Belden 

I 

502 

Geo.  AlcOuesten  Co. 

James  Walsh 

I 

503 

(.-                            u                                (( 

Henry  Knox 

2 

504 

U                           il                               (C 

John  W.  McBurney 

2 

505 

u 

Henry  D.  Rogers 

2 

506 

(.                              U                                   it 

John  H.  Buckley 

2 

507 

" 

Geo.  T.  Claws 

2 

508 

Pope  &  Cottle 

Louis  Blaine 

I 

509 

u        ft              a 

James  J.  Porter 

I 

510 

u        u 

J.  A.  Carr 

I 

511 

"        " 

Chas.  W.  McHalton 

I 

512 

John  :M.  Woods  &  Co. 

*Xyrnn  R.  Alerrifield 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


ACRE 


FARM 


295  to  305  A  Street 


Telephone  1751  Main 


(INCORPORATED) 

STOW,     MASS. 

Station,   South   Acton 

Hospital  and  Rest  for  Abused 
and  Injured  Horses 

Old    Favorites    Pensioned   for    Life.       Country 

Rest  for  City  Working  Horses.      Worn-out 

and  Aged  Horses  Rescued  from  Cheap 

Sales  Stables    and   Junk  W^agons. 

SUPPORTED    BY    CONTRIBUTIONS 
P.  O.  Box  400  Stow 


WILLIAM  ALBRECHT 

Mbolesale  Bealcr 
llmporter  anb  JSottlcr 

New  England  Distributer  For 

BARTHOLOMAY   BREWERY   CO. 

Rochester,  N.  Y.,  Lagfer  and  Ale. 

Imported  Beers 

WILSON  DISTILLING  CO., 

Baltimore,  Md. 

U.   S.   Distributer  For 

BASS'  ALE,  Centaur  Brand,  Bass 
&  Co.,  En§:land. 

STERLING    ALE,    WILLIAM    AL- 
BRECHT'S  Original  Bottling:. 
Rueter  &  Co.,  Boston,  Mass. 

AULD  SCOTTIE  WHISKY 
James  Menzies  &  Son,  Glasgow,  Scotland 


Telephone,  Haymarket  Nos.  491  and  492 

C.  BERRY  &  CO, 

Importers  and  W^holesale  Dealers  in 

WINES  and  LIQUORS 

Bottlers  of 

LAGER,  ALE  and  PORTER 

Proprietors  of  Berry's  Diamond  W^edding 
Rye  and  Bourbon  Whiskey 

84  to  88  LEVERETT   ST.    and  2  to  8    ASH- 
LAND ST.,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

J.  C.  TALBOT 

FANCY  AND  STAPLE 

GROCERIES 

1157  WASHINGTON  ST. 

DORCHESTER 

Branch  Store  : 

Associates  Building,  Milton 

Established  1815 


^ 


SAFoi' 


Safety  Barrel 

Pat.  March  28,  1893 

Buy  the  "SAFETY 
ASH     BARREL," 

made  of  very  heavy 
steel,  with  heavy 
single  ribbed 
guards,  if  you  want 
a  barrel  that  will 
outlast  any  ether 
made  Sold  by  all 
first  class  dealers. 

DOVER  STAMPING 
&  MFG.    COMPA^Y 


ESTABLISHED    1841 

W.  P.  STONE  &  COMPANY 

Manufacturers  of 

WAGONS,  CARAVANS  and  SLEDS 

CARRIAGE  PAINTING 

REPAIRING  IN  ALL   BRANCHES 

175   and    179    WEST    FIRST    ST. 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


CLASS  26— ICE 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


513  Fletcher  Ice  Co. 

514  Fells  Ice  Co. 


^Albert  P.  Fletcher 
Guildford  D.  Saunders 


CLASS  27  — MASTER  TRUCKMEN^S  RUNABOUT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  avv^ard  one  First,  one  Second,  and  one  Third  ribbon. 


515  W.  C.  Bray 

516  I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

517  New  England 

Confectionery  Co. 


Leonard  Cook  ^ 

(Has  been  in  employ  of  W.  C.  Bray  32  years.) 

Louis  LI.  Steinberg;-  i 


=Henrv  La  Croix 


CLASS  28  — TRUCKMEN 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


518 

c. 

A.  Burkett 

519 

F. 

A.  Barlow 

520 

' 

5^1 

'             " 

521A 

H 

S.  Barron 

S22 

Bl 

inn,  Morrill  &  Co 

S22> 

'            " 

524 

525 

526 

527 

• 

528 

" 

529 

" 

*John  W.  Burkett 
Ralph  Leach 
Geo.  C.  Benson 
Geo.  A.  Jenkins 

*C.  A.  Clouse 
Henry  Marsh 
Ernest  Marsh 

*James  Gorman 
William  Alorgan 
Fred  Crouse 
John  Holland 

*\Villiani  Lane 
Herbert  Lombard 


•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


THE  BEER  THAT  HADE 
niLWAUKEE  FAHOUS 


Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

General  N.  E.  Agents  of  the 
Jos.  Schlitz  Brewing  Co.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale  Dealers,  Importers  and 

Bottlers  of  High  Grade 

Goods  Only 


340-350  C  STREET,  SOUTH  BOSTON 

Telephone  Connection 


South  Boston  Roofing  Co. 

THOMAS     WALSH.    Proprietor 

SLATE,  TIN  AND  COMPOSITION 

ROOFING 

Gutters  and  Conductors  Made  and  Repaired 

RESIDENCE  WORKS  OFFICE 

611  Ninth  St.       380  W.  First  St.        474  Broadway 

Tel.  574-3  South  BOSTON        SOUTH     BOSTON 


Telephone.  147    Brighton 

JOHN  H.  SULLIVAN 

General  Contractor 

LAKE    STREET 

Cor.   Commonwealth   Avenue 


1886 


1910 


Twenty-four    Years 

Doing    One    Thing, 

and  Doing  it  Well 

We  have  customers  today  who  started  with  us 
twenty-four  years  ago,  and  employees  who  have 
been  with  us  nineteen  and  twenty-one  years. 
There  has  been  no  change  in  management  from 
the  start.  We  can  please  you  as  well  as  we 
have  pleased  others. 

BAY   STATE    CLEAN 
TOWEL   COMPANY 

G.     L.     GOULDING.    Prop. 

6a  Park  Square,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telepone  Oxford  424 

Original  Dixie  Brand 
PEANUT     BUTTER 

AND 

SALTED    PEANUTS 

MANUFACTURED     BY 

The  Kelly  Peanut  Company 

200  State  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

Compliments    of 

Hotel  Bellevue 


¥¥^¥¥¥¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥r¥¥ ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ 


CLASS  2Z  —  TRUCKIVIEN  —  Continued 
DIVISION  A— Continued 


No  of 

Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

530 

Boston  Elevated 

Railway  Company 

Chester  H.  Meaddox 

531 

u 

John  J.  O'Connor 

532 

" 

*Charles  S.  Moore 

533 

u 

Patrick  J.  Connelly 

534 

«                        a 

-Daniel  Hayes 

535 

u 

*Dennis  ^IcCarthy 

536 

u 

*John  E.  Dempsey 

537 

" 

Andrew  Blake 

2 

538 

" 

Edward  J.  Delaney 

2 

539 

u 

John  W.  Robinson 

2 

540 

William  C.  Bray 

*Everett  P.  Alclntire 

I 

541 

'•'       " 

Ira  Sprague 

2 

54-2 

" 

*Wm.  ^L  Parrott 

2 

543 

F.  Callahan  &  Co. 

James  Barry 

2 

544 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

Robert  Jordan 

545 

'■• 

Barnard  Kelley 

546 

u 

William  Paine 

547 

u 

Fred  Roberts 

548 

G.  J.  &  J.  H.  Conners 

Thos.  F.  Driscoll 

549 

Dellea  Bros. 

James  H.  Clayton 

550 

.. 

John  J.  Dellea 

55^ 

u 

^''Cornelius  A.  Durgin 

552 

" 

John  ^IcCormick 

552A 

T.  V.  Doyle  &  Co. 

William  H.  Peavey 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


Atwood&McManus 

MAMKACTURERS 
OF  ALL  KL\DS  OF 

Moo^cn  16oyc9 

IPaclnno  Cases  an^ 

IkinMtno  moo^ 

Telephone  Connection 
-^^^^ 

FACTORY  AND  OFFICE 

Carter  Street  and  Fourth  Street 

CHELSEA,  MASS. 

W.  J.  TINGLEY 

TEAMING 

ana 

JOBBING 

58  BURRILL  ST. 

ROXBURY 

W.M.Robinson 

Hay,  Grain  and 
Poultry  Food 

Adams  and  Park  Streets 
Dorchester 


...BUY... 

CHASE'S 


SUPERFINE  FAWN 
WOOL  SQUARE 


Blankcte 


Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes  —  Look  for 
the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade-Mark  —  When 
buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the  word 

''CHASE" 


J.  C.  DRISCOLL 

Truckman 


Forwarder 


46  Fulton  Street,  Boston 


Telephone,  Dorchester   796-1 


Dorchester 
Ice  Company 

Dorchester 


CLASS  28  —  TRUCKMEN  —  Continued 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No  of 

No.  of 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

Horses 

553 

John  C.  Driscoll 

William  H.  Driscoll 

I 

554 

"     •• 

John  C.  Driscoll,  Jr. 

I 

555 

" 

George  F.  Young 

I 

556 

R.  J.  Elder 

Bernard  Peterson 

2 

557 

Frost  Forwarding  & 

Transfer  Co. 

Patrick  J.  L.  ^Murphy 

I 

558 

" 

William  L.  Linehan 

2 

55SA 

Frank  Gnecco 

Frank  Gnecco 

1 

55SB 

' '            ' ' 

Fred  Cuneo 

I 

559 

H.  B.  Gould 

William  McLeod 

I 

560 

" 

Daniel  F.  Crowley 

I 

561 

Louis  Greenberg 

Louis  Greenberg 

I 

562 

W.  L.  Hallett 

Thomas  F.  Roche 

I 

563 

" 

Daniel  J.  Donahue 

2 

564 

John  A.  Hanson 

Albert  Helmar 

I 

565 

" 

William  H.  Overy 

I 

566 

Louis  Jeselsohn 

*Jacob  Buxbaum 

I 

567 

R.  A.  Kennett 

*Henry  Harvey 

I 

568 

"           " 

*Con.   McCarthy 

2 

569 

« 

*Elwood  Demerritt 

2 

570 

" 

Eugene  Stinson 

2 

571 

" 

Frank  Perry 

2 

572 

u 

*Geo.  Benham 

2 

573 

u     ■ 

Fred  Hitchcock 

2 

• 

574 

A.  W.  Knight 

*Geo.  F.  James 

575 

Harry  Mandel 

Louis  Goldstein 

576 

Kenneth  R.  MacCharles 

Kenneth  R.  ]vIacCharles 

577 

J.  W.  McEnany 

*Frank  Watson 

578 

" 

*  Charles  E.  Duffey 

579 

" 

Daniel  ]\IcCann 

580 

" 

Daniel  Moninhan 

581 

" 

"^^Dennis  F.  Kennealy 

582 

" 

^Bartholomew  M.  Flaherty 

2 

583 

" 

^Joseph  A.  McDonald 

2 

584 

" 

Joseph  Bouvie 

2 

585 

=^=Francis  i\L  Sullivan 

2 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


C.  B.  SMITH  &  BRO. 

Mbolesale 
(Brocers  .  . 

AND  WHOLESALE  DISTRIBUTORS 
AND    OWNERS   OF 

STATE 
HOUSE 
FLOUR 

REMEMBER 

WE   SELL  TO  ADVERTISE 
OTHERS  ADVERTISE  TO  SELL 


BLINN,  MORRILL 
&  COMPANY 

truckmen 


6  CHATHAM   ROW 

AND 

113    FRANKLIN   STREET 
BOSTON 


W.  J.  HIGGINS 

llmporters 

anb 

(Brocers 

128-134  EMERSON   STREET 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


ALLSTON 
LAUiNDRY  I 

H.  G-.   PRESCOTT,  Proprietor 

6,  8,  10   Braintree  Street 
ALLSTON.  MASS. 


E.  S.  HARRIS  k  SON 

^Truckmen 

Forwarders  of  Merchandise  of  all  Descriptions 
and  General  Jobbing 

OKl'KK 

199  SOUTH  STREET,  BOSTON 

Telephone   1496  Oxford 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.  D.   CRESSY 


G.  B.  HOWARD  &  CO. 

XCeamstere 

ant) 

jFoivparbers 

Clinton  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 


CLASS   28  — TRUCKMEN  — Continued 
DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved, 


No.  of 
rtibbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Hoises 

586 

F.  A.  Mosman 

James  A.  Bell 

588 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Martin  J.  Cunningham 
Gilbert  H.  McWilliams 

589 
590 

Robert  R.  Reid 

James  Donnelly 
Robert  R.  Reid 

3 

591 

George  M.  Reid 

George  M.  Reid 

592 

Ernest  S.  Roberts 

James  H.  Newland 

2 

593 
594 

Thomas  Romano 
W.  C.  Sanders  &  Co. 

Thomas  Romano 
Walter  Mackie 

595 
596 
597 

The  D.  A.  Smith  Co. 
J.  B.  Smith 

John  R.  Smith 
John  A.  Carr 
W^illiam  Roberts 

598 
599 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

Stephen  Kimball 
Ed.  De  Stacio 

600 

u                         u 

Fred  M.  \'ance 

2 

601 

^William  F.  AIeese 

2 

602 

a                         a 

Patrick  Kane 

2 

603 
604 
605 
606 

Henrv  W.  Walter 
J.  H.' Watts 

Webber  &  Co. 

Henry  W.  Walter 
H.  J.  Fenton 
P.  J.  Hurley 
*Remus  Bert 

2 

607 

Edward  A.  Sears 

=^Geo.  H.  Welch 

608 
609 
610 

Frank  D.  A\'ilkins 

D.  S.  Woodberry  &  Co. 

*James  J.  AIcGranachan 
j.  H.  Whidden 
Fred  A.  Haskell 

611 
612 

.. 

John  D.  Sidney 
Frank  B.  Wadsworth 

2 

613 
614 

Youlden,  Sn 

lith  &  Hopkins 

Wm.  Thompson 
Herbert  Estabrook 

615 

U                                     i 

u              u 

Thomas  Redmond 

616 

u 

Samuel  Ingalls 

2 

617 
618 

John  Bernard 
William  Wilson 

2 

2 

619 

Lawrence  Broderick 

2 

620 
621 

u 

James  Finn 
Walter  Reis 

2 

6 

Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 

PUREOXIA 
Co. 

G.W.&F.  SMITH  IRON  COMPANY 

STRUCTURAL        STEEL 
AND    ARCHITECTURAL 

IRON    WORK 


OFFICES,  SHOPS   AND    FOUNDRY 

Island,  Gerard,  Farnham  and  Reading  Streets, 
Boston,  Mass..  U.  S.  a. 


COMPLIMENTS 
OF 

Fells  Ice 
Company 


GEO.  G.  FOX  CO. 


BAKERS 


CHARLESTOWN,  MASS, 


Telephone.  469  Roxbury 

Dr.  James  F.  Hanley 
VETERINARIAN 

1456   Tremont   Street 
ROXBURY,  Mass. 

COMPLIMENTS   OF 

THE     RESCUE 
MISSION 

WOOD  AND  COAL  YARD 

65   WEST   DEDHAM    STREET 
BOSTON,    MASS. 


CLASS  29  — FOUR-HORSE  TEAMS 
LAWRENCE  GOLD  MEDAL 

(This  Class  is  restricted  to  teams  taken  care  of  by  the  driver.) 
The  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows  :  first  Prize,  Lawrence  Gold  Medal  to 
the  owner;  Silver  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Second  Prize,  Silver  Medal  to 
the  owner ;  Bronze  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Third  Prize,  Certificate  to  the 
owner  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver ;  and  the  Judges  may  also  award  to  the  remaining 
entries  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the  driver. 


No-  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

622 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Wm.  Erskins 

4 

62Z 

..        u 

*MlCHEL  DeYEREAUX 

4 

624 

The  Brockway-Smith 

Corporation 

*CharIes  W.  Waitte 

4 

625 

R.  J.  Elder 

Rescic  Garland 

4 

626 

I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

*M.  T.  Folger 

4 

627 

R.  A.  Kennett 

*Levi  Clark 

4 

628 

J.  W.  McEnany 

^Phillip  H.  Boyd 

4 

629 

National  Fire  Proofing  Co. 

Carl  Williams 

4 

630 

John  T.  Scully  Co. 

Michael  J.  Curran 

4 

631 

Youlden.  Smith  &  Hopkins 

Charles  Gilbert 

4 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


C.  CAPILLO  &  CO. 

Wholesale  Dealers  in 

(Zboice  mines  and  Ciquors 

Bottlers  of 
ALES,  LAGER,  BEER  AND  PORTER 

138-144  Commercial  St. 
Tel.  179  Richmond  Boston,  MaSS, 


McGreevey  &  Company 

COAL 

Telephone  Roxbury  1338-2,  1338-3 
77   SMITH   STREET,  ROXBURY 

BRASS    SIGNS 
FOR   WAGONS 


C.    H.    Buck    &    Company 

309  Washington  Street, 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

J.  T.  Tighe  Company 

BEST    GRADES 
FAMILY  AND   STEAM 

COAL 

LOWEST    CASH    PRICES 

Telephone    156    South    Boston 

WHARF,     -     FIRST   ST.   FOOT   OF  F    ST. 

YARD,    -     -     -      331    WEST    FOURTH    ST. 

SOUTH     BOSTON 


SEAVERNS 
PIANO 
ACTION 

COMPANY 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS, 
COMPLIMENTS    OF 

The 
TRIMOUNT 

LAUNDRY 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

LYNDONVILLE 

CREAMERY 

ASSOCIATION 

A  Free  Clinic  for  Animals 
OF  THE  POOR 

IS    MAINTAINED    DAILY    FROM 
2   TO  3   O'CLOCK   BY   THE  NEW 

COMMONWEALTH   HOSPITAL 
FOR  ANIMALS 

24  Cummington   Street,   Back  Bay- 
Telephone  2946  Back  Bay 


I 


CLASS  30  — COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No- of 

Ribbon 

No- of 
Intry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

632 

E.  J.  Uahcock 

Henry  Wright 

633 

.. 

*  Joseph  A.  Leach 

634 

" 

^''Joseph  E.  Dvv}er 

635 

" 

*Erederick  McGinley 

636 

.. 

*J(jhn  N.  Watson 

(^Z7 

John  W.  Doherty 

638 

" 

'^^].  Henderson 

^^39 

N.  E.  Gas  &  Coke  Co. 

Alfred  Grignerc 

2 

640 

.       "      "       - 

Thomas  J.  Savage 

3 

641 

Webster  Charcoal  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Tobin 

I 

642 

. 

*Harry  Martell 

I 

^'43 

" 

*Jcremiah  J.  Tobin 

I 

644 

u 

*Walter  E.  Higgins 

2 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 

Wholesale  Provisions 


130-l^f5    Br^A.OJKSTOrV^fi>    JS^X'., 


ibostoin: 


mil 

IRON  AND 

COAL 


APOSTOLU  BROS. 
6reeR  fruiterers 

Choice  Fruits  and  Vegetables, 

Light  Groceries  and  Confectionery- 
Fancy  Assorted  Baskets  of  Fruit  for 
Parties  or  Gifts  a  Specialty 

995  BOYLSTON  ST.,       BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  3544  Back  Bay 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

UNION  GLASS 
COMPANY 


STURTEYANT  &  HALEY 
BEEF  &  SUPPLY  COMPANY 

Slaughterers  of 
Fancy  Corn  Fed  Cattle, 

Manufacturers  of  Prime  Oleo  Oils, 
Stearine  and  Tallow. 

DEALERS  IN 

LAMB,  PORK  AND  VEAL, 

HAMS,  BACON,  LARD,  Etc. 

38  &  40  FANEUIL  HALL  MARKET, 

BOSTON. 

ABATTOIR,  52  SOMERVILLE  AVE., 
SOMERVILLE. 

FULTON  O'BRION 

flour,  Grain,  Ray, 
feed  and  Straw 

Nos.  3  and  4  UNION  SQUARE. 

Elevator  and  Storehouse,  28  Lake  Street. 
TELEPHONE  136-4. 

Telephone,  Main  1767 

A.  A.  ROWE  &  SON 

Forwarding  Agents 
and  Truckmen 

CUSTOM  HOUSE  BROKERS 

32  INDIA  WHARF,    BOSTON 


CLASS  3 J- COAL 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 

No.  of 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

Horses 

645 

American  Coal  Co. 

Wm.  Anderson 

I 

646 

" 

Frederick  Jackson 

2 

647 

« 

Otto  Anderson 

Z 

648 

"               " 

Daniel  Shine 

2 

649 

Batchelder  Bros. 

*MlCHAEL   MiNTON 

2 

650 

a 

*John  F.  Reagan 

2 

651 

"                     " 

*  Andrew  Stockman 

2 

652 

" 

*Geo.  W.  White 

2 

653 

,      ••                     " 

*  James  J.  Madden 

3 

654 

" 

*Dennis  Crowley 

3 

655 

" 

*John  L.  lliomas 

3 

656 

Boston  Industrial 

Home,  Inc. 

*John  Anderson 

I 

657 

(<                     a                 li           li 

*James  Gibson 

I 

658 

The  John  A.  Bradford 

Coal  Co. 

John  Arnold 

I 

659 

" 

*Edward  P.  Brynes 

I 

660 

a           u                         a               a 

Patrick  O'Toole 

2 

661 

ii               U                                  li                    ({ 

James  Sheehan 

2 

662 

"           "                        "              " 

*Wm.  Fotherbee 

3 

663 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal 

Company 

*Barnett  Portnoi 

I 

664 

t(           a        (I           (f                  tt 

•     Harry  Broomfield 

I 

665 

u         u             u                     ti 

Cris  Shepard 

I 

666 

U               ((           ((                «                         (( 

Cornelius  Sullivan 

2 

667 

"    "-     "         « 

*Charles  Machere 

3 

668 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

Patrick  Donahoe 

I 

669 

"         "       " 

Patrick  Welch 

2 

670 

Chas.  T.  Garland 

Roland  S.  Trowbridge 

2 

(^72> 

Martin  Godvin 

*Thomas  Hawkins 

I 

673A 

Austin  Gove  &  Son,  Inc. 

Ed  Galmieaux 

I 

673B 

" 

Wm.  Ouinn 

I 

673c 

" 

James  Connolly 

2 

673D 

" 

*  Patrick  Hamilton 

3 

674 

]\Iorris  Greenberg 

Morris  Greenberg 

I 

675 

Timothy  Hanrahan 

Hugh  F.  Fitzgerald 

2 

676 

B.  S.  Hatch  Co. 

Frank  Boney 

2 

677 

J.  F.  Kiley 

J.  F.  Kiley,  Jr. 

I 

678 

Maiden  Coal  Co. 

Walter  J.  Harrington 

I 

679 

U               It                    (( 

*Martin  Stead 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


B.Kinneen&Co, 

truckmen 


4  and  5  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephone  Connection  Established  1899 

WEBSTER  CHARCOAL  CO. 

J.  J.  O'BRIEN 

WHOLESALE    DEALER   IN 

Best  Hardwood  Charcoal 

jt  ^  ^ 

OFFICE  : 

36  Webster  Avenue  :   CAMBRIDGE,  MASS.. 


Establisted  1822 


E,   A.   HARRIS 


H.  A.  HOVEY  &  Co. 

Dealers   in 

Butter,  Cheese  /^  €99$ 

No.  32  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephone,  Richmond  930  BOSTON 

Bain  Brothers  Co. 

Wholesale 
GROCERS 


M.FREDIANI&SONS 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

Fine  Confectionery 

and  Salted  Nuts 

187  Dudley  Street,  Roxbury 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co. 

122  W.  FIRST  STREET 
SOUTH  BOSTON 

jt  ^  ^ 

Wholesale  Agents  for 

Standard  lUood  Co. 

of  New  York 
J.  S.  Newcomb  G.   M.  Legg 

J.  S.  Newcomb  &  Co. 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal  and  Poultry 


240  MILK  STREET   :   BOSTON 


Basement,  4  Coincy  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Richmond  220 


Cocke€oal€o. 


MALDEN  AND  MEDFORD 


CLASS   31— COAL  — Continued 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 
Miss  E.  K.  Forgan  offers  a  prize  of  $5 ,  for  the  driver  having  won  the  greatest  number  of  blues. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

1     No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

680 

J.  A.  Marsh  Coal  Co. 

*Allen  B.  IMcKim 

2 

681 

AIcGreevey  &  Co. 

John  Noonan 

682 

"                 it 

Edward  Noonan 

683 

"                 " 

John  Thomason 

684 

MetropoHtan  Coal  Co. 

='=Geo.  W.  Dalton,  Jr. 

685 

" 

a           a 

*Jere  O'Xeil 

686 

" 

a           a 

Thomas  Dalton 

687 

" 

((           il 

*Thomas  E.  Grady,  Jr. 

688 

" 

i          a 

*  Louis  Goosby 

2 

689 

" 

a 

Michael  T.  Lynch 

2 

690 

tc 

i          il 

Peter  Connolly 

2  • 

691 

" 

'          " 

*iAfichael  J.  Griffin 

2 

692 

" 

i 

^Christopher  F.  Willard 

2 

693 

"                      il         ii 

James  A.  States 

3 

694 

W.  H.  Pevear  &  Co. 

*Martin  Faraher 

2 

69s 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

*JOHX    F.    COXXORS 

I 

696 

"      .           "              <'           u 

William  Hearst 

I 

697 

"          "      •  "       f< 

-Patrick  Lombard 

2 

698 

a              ii           ..         il 

*Michael  O'Neil 

2 

699 

Roger  Sullivan 

Roger  Sullivan 

I 

700 

Frank  A.  Teele 

John  Reardon 

I 

701 

a           a               a 

Patrick  Desmond 

I 

702 

a           a               a 

Peter  Cassidy 

I 

703 

Wellington-Wild   Coal   Co. 

George  Hallett 

I 

704 

"                               a            li 

*David  B.  Proctor 

2 

705 

«                             ..            a 

"^^ James  J.  Alahoney 

2 

706 

" 

'^'Richard  J.  Harris 

2 

707 



*Thomas  Welch 

2 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

MAGEE'S 

EAST  BOSTON 
EXPRESS 

Tel.  212  East  Boston 

C.  BUTLER   &  CO. 

Truckmen  and 
Forwarders 

245  Purchase  Street,  Boston 

TELEPHONE    724  MAIN 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

John  A.  Bradford 
Coal  Company 

GEORGE  ADAMS,  Manager 

Union  Steam  Sponging 
Works 

103    and    105    Bedford    Street, 
BOSTON 

Telephone,    Oxford   go 

Cloth  Sponges  and  Refinishers 

London  Shrunk  Process 


A.   J.   BARTLETT 

ESTABLISHED   1840 
Commission  Merchant  and  Dealer  in 

Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs  and  Poultry 

7  and  8  No/jWarket  St.  and  7  Qinton  St. 
BOSTON,   MASS. 

Best   Grades   a   Specialty.         Tel.  Connection. 

If    you     anticipate    moving    to     REVERE    or 
WINTHROP,    do    not  forget    the 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

which   supplies  electricity  for   light  and  power 
and  gas  for  lighting,  heating  and  cooking. 

SUBURBAN  GAS  &  ELECTRIC  CO. 

Revere  and  Winthrop 

V.    TASSINARI    &    CO. 

SUCCESSORS  TO 

J.  SCARONI   &   CO. 

RESTAURANT 

Importers,  Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  In 

Italian  and  French  Groceries 

Macaroni,  Cheese  and  Olive  Oil,  Wines  and 

Liquors,  Cigars,  Tobacco  and  Paper  Bags 

NOS.  98,  100  and  102  CROSS  STREET,  BOSTON 

Telephone  1159  Richmond  Between  Hanover  and  North  Sts. 

Austin   Gove   8z:   Son 

(INCORPORATED) 
Dealers    in 

Coal,  Wood   and 
Mason  Supplies 

WHARVES: 

212  [Border    Street,    East   Boston 

TELEPHONE    MO 


CLASS  32 -DELIVERIES,  DEPARTMENT   STORES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved.  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan  offers  a  prize  of  Five  Dollars  for  the  best  pair  of  horses,  age 
considered,  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of       1    No.  of 
Ribbon           Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Ko-  of 
Horses 

708 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

*  James  K.  Padden 

709 

u 

*Wm.  E.  Denvir 

710 

a 

*Lewis  H.  Adams 

711 

Jordan    ]\Iarsh  Co. 

=^John  D.  Lockney 

712 

"                ''       " 

*  James  A.  Reagan 

713 

u                         a           .< 

*John  J    Boylan 

714 

" 

*Wm.  J.  Stewart 

715 

'•' 

*James  Gegan 

716 

il                           u             .< 

*James  Hagerty 

717 

u 

*Wm.  T.  Lockney 

718 

" 

*Louis  Briar 

719 

" 

Geo.  Hart 

720 

u 

*Thos.  J.  Lonergan 

721 

Henry  Siegel  Co. 

*Arthiir  Wright 

722 

it                        a           St 

*John  A.   Coyne 

J^Z 

tt           u 

Thos.  Concough 

724 

" 

*John  S.  Adams 

725 

" 

Joseph  Creighton 

726 

" 

*John  J.  Kelley 

727 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

^Cornelius  J.  !Moynihan 

72% 

••'       " 

*Thos.  J.  Connelly 

729 

tt 

Harry  H.  Weeks 

730 

tt       .< 

Daniel  Gill 

731 

"       " 

*Timnthy  ?ilurphy 

712 

" 

-Timothy  J.  Driscoll 

- 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


W.  F.  McKlNNON 
Yrmt  and  ProdMce  Dealer 

204  Vine  Street 
Everett        -    -        Mass. 

J.  A.  HATHAWAY  &  CO. 

37  and  39 
FANEUIL   HALL   MARKET 

9  SOUTH    MARKET  STREET 
BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  RICHMOND  932 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Company 
Pure  milk  and  Cream 

We  make  a  Specialty  of  Family  Trade.  Th® 
dairies  in  which  our  milk  is  produced  are  unde 
the  examination  of  our  oun  inspectors.  The 
cows  are  clean,  the  stables  whitewashed  and 
well  Hghted,  the  milk  is  promptly  cooled  and 
shipped  bj  express  trains  in  refrigerator  cars. 

WALES    PLACE 
DORCHESTER  -         MASS. 

TELEPHONE  2100  DORCHESTER 

COMPLIMENTS 
-OF 


A  Friend 


ym^ 


ESTABLISHED  1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

I)ammered  Iron  and  Steel  Tcrdinss 

Office  and  Works  at 

340  Maverick  Street,  East  Boston 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

A.  S.  Smith,  Pres.         Tnos.  L.  Dunhar,  Treas. 

TnOS.  COPELAND,   Supt. 

W.  C.  Smith,  Asst.  Supt. 

COMPLIMENTS 
OF 

W.  A.  Clement 

213  WASHINGTON  STREET 
ROXBURY 


Frank   M.   Babcock 
Teamster  and  Forwarding  Agent 

office: 

7  WATER  STREET,  BOSTON 

Tel.  4184-2  Main  Room  306 

L.  A.  WATERHOUSE 

Cruckman 


*~^^^'^~' 


11^^  FEDERAL  STREET 
BOSTON  -        -  MASS. 

TELEPHONE,  MAIN  3421-3 


CLASS  33  — BARREL   RACKS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved.  In  addition,  the  London  Harness  Company  offers  a  Street  Blanket  for  the  best 
horse,  age  considered,  and  Hill  &  Hill  offer  a  Cooler  for  the  second  best  horse,  age 
considered.     Miss  E.  K.  Forgan  offers  a  prize  of  Five  Dollars. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

72>d> 

Peter  Anderson 

John  G.  Shine 

I 

7ZA- 

- 

Wm.  J.  Anderson 

I 

7y:> 

M.  H.  Blute 

Michael  H.  Blute 

I 

736 

Geo.  R.  Busby 

John  J.  Oliver 

I 

73,7 

u              . 

John  J.  Conlon 

I 

738 

Peter  F.  Donnelly 

Edward  Kenney 

2 

739 

John  Alorrissy 

Geo.  Minahan 

• 

740 

u 

Wm.  J.  Cosgrove 

I 

741 

D.  F.  Sheehan 

D.  F.  Sheehan 

I 

741A 

A.  C.  Westhoff 

C.  J.  Lyons 

I 

741B 

"    " 

A.  C.  Westhoff 

I 

742 

John  \V.  Whitney 

*Geo.  H.  Younkers 

I 

743 

a            a                  It 

Thos.  C.  Banister 

I 

744 

"            " 

John  W.  Whitney 

■ 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


ALL  RAIL  COAL  FOR 

FAMILY  USES  A 

SPECIALTY 


FRANK     A.    TEELE 

W.    SOMERVILLE 

Telephones.  54-55 

JOHN     SCHWALM 

SUCCESSOR    TO 

David  Myers  &  Co. 

TAILOR 

516  and  517  Colonial  Building 

100   BOYLSTON   ST.,   BOSTON 

Telephone    1563-2   Oxford 

M.    ROSENFELD 

Importers  of 

Cheese  and  Fancy  Groceries 

VICTORY  BRAND  PURE  OLIVE  OIL 

A  PRODUCT  OF    ITALY 

67      FULTON     STREET 
Boston,  Mass. 


A.    A.    LEMAY 

PAINTER 

Telephone   Cambridge    12^6-4 


(jlazing,     i  inting.    Whitening    and    Hard- 

Wooa   Finisning. 

Out  or  Tcwn  Work  a  Specialty. 

32  and  98  River  Street,  Cambridgeport,  Mass. 

The  TERMINAL 

2241   WASHINGTON  ST. 
ROXBURY,   MASS. 

136  MASSACHUSETTS  AVE. 
BACK   BAY 


Home;[Made  Candies,  Soda 

and  Ice  Cream  a 

Specialty. 

FACTORY.  8  RUGGLES  ST. 

GEO.     E.     TRIANTAFEL 


CLASS  34— HUCKSTERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved.     In  addition,  Messrs.  James  Forgie's  Sons  offer  a  Street  Blanket  for  the  best 


horse,  a 

2je  considered.     Prizes  of    Five  Dollars 

are   also  offered    by  Mrs.  Arthur  Foote, 

Miss  Katharine  Foote  and  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan. 

No.  of 
Ribbon 

No  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

745 

Peter  Apostolu 

Peter  Apostolu                                i 

746 

Geo.  Bougopoulos 

S.  S.  Strauropoulos                        i 

747 

((                    a 

Nicholas  C.  Bougopoulos              i 

748 

Wm.  E.  Bell 

Wm.  E.  Bell                                     i 

749 

James  AI.  Brown 

Arthur  O'Neil                                 i 

750 

J.  B.  Burns 

Wm.  Don  a  von                                 i 

751 

a                    a 

*Charles  Sloan                                   i 

752 

Wm.  G.  Burrows 

*Wm.  J.  Burrows                             1 

753 

Edw.  A.  Campbell 

Walter  P.  Landry                          i 

754 

Louis  G.  Camuzis 

Chas.  G.  Camuzis                           i 

755 

M.  F.  Carroll 

*John  P.  Carroll                                i 

73(^ 

Michael  Coakley 

David  Coakley                                i 

7S7 

John  T.  Coiley 

John  T.  Coiley                                  i 

758 

Constantine  Cokinos 

Edward  J.  Ronan                            i 

759 

P.  A.  Conliil 

P.  A.  Conlin                                    1 

760 

John  L.  Duffley 

^Richard  P.  Duffley                          i 

761 

James  Costello 

James  Costello                                i 

762 

John  Feroli 

John  Feroli                                      i 

763 

Coleman  J.  Foley 

Wm.  F.  Mahoney                          i 

764 

Thos.  F.  Ford 

Frank  Eustice                                 i 

765 

((              Ct                  11 

Thos.   F.  Ford                                i 

766 

M.  D.  Geaney 

j\[.  D.  Geaney                                  i 

767 

S.  Grishaver 

AL  Alexander                                 i 

(Talking  horse ;  exhibition  will  be  given  by  driver.) 

'Entitled  to  Driver's 


JOHNW.WHITNEY 

Dealer  in 

BARRELS 

9  Chestnut  Street 

SOHERVILLE,   HASS. 

Telephone  1579-2  Somervillc 

WINDOW  SHADES 

Made  to  Order 

THE  HOfT  COMPgil! 

347  Broadway,  South  Boston 
443  Broadway,  South  Boston 
1246  Dorchester  Avenue,  Dorchester 

Estimates  Furnished 


F.  H.   MCCALL 

THE   HARNESS    MAN      :     CHARLESTOWN 
Get  His  Prices 


Fearing,  WMton  &  Co,  Inc. 

Commission  Itlercbants 

COTTON   FABRICS 
COTTON   YARNS 

655  Atlantic  Avenue,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone  Richmond  632 

Stillman  Bottling  Co. 

BOTTLERS    OF 

Lager  Beer,  Ale  and  Porter 

42  and  44   Stillman  Street 

BOSTON 


CHAS.   H.    PERRY 


aDverttstng  S\>6tcin 


4a  Irvington  Street 

Near  Huntington  Avenue 
BOSTON,     MASS. 


President,  Geo.  H.  Buck 


,  reasurer. 


David  C.  Buck 


Eastern  Storage  Co* 

EVERETT  AVE.  AND  MAPLE  ST. 
CHELSEA 

Storage  for  all  kinds  of  Merchandise  and 
Household  Goods. 

Connected  by  spur-track  with  B.  &  M.  R.  R. 

Shipments  made  direct  by  rail  or  by  our 
own  team?. 


CLASS  34  —  HUCKSTERS  —  Continued 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No- of 
Horses 

768 

Everett  W.  Harrington 

*Ralph  E.  Harrington 

2 

769 

Charles  M.  Howe 

Dennis  Donovan 

770 

Lopez  Brothers 

Joseph  Lopez 

.771 

Jeremiah  F.  Alahoney 

Jeremiah  F.  Mahoney 

yy2 

Wm.  F.  McKinnon 

Frank  Driscoll 

77Z 

"     " 

Wm.  F.  J\'IcKinnon 

77A 

"     " 

J.  J.  McKinnon 

77S 

'•     " 

Fred  W.  Ormsby 

77^ 

Daniel  jNIcLaughlin 

Daniel  McLaughlin 

777 

Patrick  Moynihan 

Joseph  E.  ^Moynihan 

77^ 

Joseph  F.  Slogan 

Joseph  F.  Mogan 

779 

S.  Mercurio 

S.  Mercurio 

780 

Thos.  F.  Nealon 

*Jos.  B.  Nealon 

781 

James  J.  Xolan 

*Dennis  J.  Xolan 

782 

Michael  F.  O'Hara 

Thos.  F.  Toohey 

783 

C.  J.  O'Leary 

C.  J.  O'Leary 

784 

Dennis  O'Leary 

Dennis  O'Leary 

(Horse  iS  years  old;  has  been  13  years 

11  service  1 

785 

Geo.  Panthony 

Geo.  Panthony 

786 

Tony  Sansone 

Tony   Sansone 

787 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

Robert  Shaw,,  Jr. 

788 

'M.  H.  Simonds 

M.  H.  Simonds 

789 

Geo.  Wilson 

Albert  E.  Wilson 

790 

Peter  Wolk 

*Hyman  Wolk 

791 

Joseph  C.  Woods 

Chas.  W.  Behm 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


CLASS   35  — EXPRESS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved.  In  addition,  the  Mark  Cross  Company  offer  a  Street  Blanket  for  the  best  horse, 
nge  considered,  owned  by  the  driver.  Mrs.  Thacher  Loring,  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan  and  the 
Association  offer  special  prizes  of  Five  Dollars  for  the  best  horse,  age  considered,  the 
money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No- of 

Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

792 

Abbott  &  Miller 

James  Mulley 

793 

Jacob  Bierweiler  &  Son 

*Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

794 

Boston  &  Springfield 

Despatch  Express  Co. 

Edw.  W.  Riley 

795 

Thos.  M.  Callahan 

Chas.  T.  Callahan 

796 

Carter,  Russell 

Express  Co. 

*Geo.  L.  Callahan 

796A 

Chase  Express  Co. 

P.  J.  Coakley 

797 

i(                  a                 4( 

Roy  Heitman 

798 

" 

Wm.  J.  Munns 

799 

Dorr's  Express 

Harry  F.  Baker 

800 

" 

Henry  B.  Warner 

801 

Daniel  J.  Dwyer 

Thos.  B.  Cheever 

802 

Joseph  L.  Fisher 

*Geo.  E.  Dolliver 

803 

Howe  &  Co.'s  Express 

John  J.  Barry 

804 

u 

*Edw^ard  T.  Earle 

805 

((                 ii                   " 

Alfred  W.  Skidmore 

806 

u 

*  Clifford  M.  Hicks 

807 

a                      «                         «"' 

John  J.  Weir 

808 

John  T.  Kilduff 

John  T.  Kildufif 

809 

Magee's  Express 

Bertram  A.  Alilroy 

810 

u 

Harry  R.  Miller 

811 

" 

Chester  W.  Magee 

812 

Mahony's  Hyde  Park 

Express 

Hugh  Rooney 

813 

"             "         "       " 

Frank  L.  Ward 

'Entitled  to  Driver's 


CLASS  35  — EXPRESS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
tntry     , 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

814 

Michael  J.  Miilcahy 

*John  E.  Mulcahy 

815 

Manuel  ^lunise 

Manuel  Munise 

816 

F.  H.  Parker  &  Sons 

F.  Stanley  Parker 

817 

C.  G.  Parnienter 

^Frederick  F.  Dolahu 

818 

Powers  &  Phelps 

Wm.  R.  Porter 

819 

u 

James  E.  Tilley 

2 

820 

i>                    ..                    u 

*Herman  LaClair 

2 

821 

J.  G.  Rose 

J.  G.  Rose 

822 

H.  T.  -Rugg 

Wm.  H.  Lyons 

823 

" 

Frank  Otis  Warner 

824 

u 

Herbert  T.   Rugg 

825 

Simon  Bros. 

John  Fernander 

826 

Savory  Express  Co. 

Wm.  J.  Keadein 

827 

- 

Frank  L.  Elward 

828 

Savage  &  Son  Express 

Wm.  D.  Higgins 

829 

" 

Theodore  E.  Murray 

839a 

Technolog-y  Transfer  Co. 

Alfred  L.  Lydston 

830 

Thompson's  Express 

Thomas  Bradley 

831 

u 

*Richard  J.  Hurley 

832 

" 

Wm.  L.  McNerlin 

833 

Michael  J.  Walsh 

834 

N.  \  educcio 

N.  A'educcio 

835 

B.  Ziff 

B.  Ziff 

836 

Groacchino  Zollo 

Groacchino  Zollo 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 


CLASS  36 -METALS  AND   JUNK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

Kv 

M.  Angel 

Benjamin  (iihnan 

2 

'\S8 

E.  B.  Badi^er  Sons  Co. 

*Daniel  Falvey 

I 

839 

- 

Joseph  A.  Small 

(This  horse  is  19  years  old  . 

I 

840 

"           "           "       " 

*^Iichael  Tworney 

2 

841 

Dover  Stamping  & 

Mfg.  Co. 

John  H.  Jones 

I 

842 

.(                         u                         ii               (C 

Dennis  A.  McGaffigan 

I 

843 

li                         .(                IC 

*James  H.  Farrell 

I 

844 

"    « 

*Daniel  F.  Collins 

2 

845 

Fay  Bros.  Co. 

Thos.  J.  Gallagher 

2 

846 

D.  F.  Healey 

D.  F.  Healey 

I 

847 

Patrick  O'Brion 

Patrick  O'Brion 

I 

848 

H.  F.  Brackett  &  Co. 

Joseph  W.  Harris 

% 

•Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


-MASOISIS  &  BUILDERS-  — 


Steam  Boilers  Set  and  Repaired.  Drain  La\ing.     Chimney  Experts. 

Machine  Whitewashing.  I'lastering. 


Concreting. 


ria.EPUONES  \  Office,  II: 


rkct  !  1^^^  ,    Residence,  Molrose  214-1 
96 


CLASS  37  — BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING   MATERIALS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No  of 
Horses 

849 

The  Atlantic  Works 

*Frank  W.  Eldridge 

850 

a                      11                      a 

*Wm.  T.  Dunbar 

851 

The  Brockway-Sniith 

Corp. 

Frank  O.  Doughty 

852 

it                      a                         t(                It 

Wm.  A.  Burshetto 

853 

E.  Dennett  &  Son 

*Chas.  W.  Dennett 

854 

I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

John  Silva 

855 

" 

Frank  Raymond 

856 

tt                    a              ci 

Ralph  Lewis 

857 

Thomas  J.  Hind 

Thomas  J.  McDonald 

858 

Kiley  Hardware  Co. 

Ernest  Stanton 

859 

James  P.  Mackey 

*Chas.  A.  Kenrick 

860 

Frank  A.  Melanson 

Elmer  Johnson 

861 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

^i^Wm.  F.  Campbell 

862 

iC                    ii                  <(                    U               ii 

Chas.  T.  Cummings 

863 

Milton  F.  Reynolds 

Peter  P.  Timmoney 

864 

So.  Boston  Roofing'  Co. 

Leo  Capples 

865 

" 

David  ^liles 

866 

" 

Edward  Reardon 

867 

Starrett  Fields  Co. 

Thomas  j.  Coolidge 

868 

" 

James  J.  Oueeney 

869 

((               i<         ii 

Thomas  ^McCarthy 

870 

" 

John  W.  McLane 

871 

H.  Wolfe 

J.  L.  Wolfe 

•Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge. 


CLASS  38— CONTRACTORS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

872 

Mrs.  B.  A.  Black 

William  J.  Black 

2 

873 

Mrs.  ^I.  E.  Broderick 

James  A.  ^IcDonald 

2 

874 

Thomas  F.  Carroll 

Thomas   E.  Carroll 

2 

875 

John  T.  Connor 

*Martin  O'Brien 

2 

876 

Michael  J.  Dwyer 

John  F.  Dwyer 

2 

877 

Charles  J.  Jacobs  Co. 

Kenneth  Eorbes 

3 

878 

John  McNealy 

*OwEX  J.  .AIcXealy 

2 

879 

Matthew  E.  Nawn 

Wm.  Fleming 

2 

880 

"           a 

James  E.  Neville 

2 

881 

«           . 

William  Scully 

2 

882 

Simon  Bros. 

*John  Daley 

2 

883 

i<           (t 

Dan  Daley 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge. 

JOHN  T.  CONNOR 
Contractor 


71   PALMER  ST.  -  -  ROXBURY 

Telephone,  749-3  Roxbury 


J.    B.    SMITH 


Teamster 


133  BLACK5T0NE  ST.,     =      BOSTON 
Telephone  Richmond   736 


STABLE  INSPECTION. 

LIST  OF  PRIZES. 


Stables. 
FIRST  PRIZE. 
Atlantic  Works. 
Frank  M.  Babcock. 
Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 
W.  C.  Bray. 

Boston  Consolidated  Gas  Co. 
Carter,  Russell  &  Co. 
Deerfoot  Farm. 

East  Boston  Gas  Co.  (Chelsea  Division). 
R.  J.  Elder. 
I.  Freedman  &  Co. 
Jos.  Gahm  &  Son. 
H.  P.  Hood  &  Sons,  Lynn  Stable. 
Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 
R.  A.  Kennett 
J.  W.  McEnany 
Maiden  Electric  Co. 
New  England  Confectionery  Co. 
Stetson  Coal  Co. 
Walworth  Mfg.  Co. 
John  W.  Whitney 
John  Wright 

SECOND  PRIZES 

H.  E.  Prescott. 
Batchelder  Bros. 

City  of  Boston  Park  Dept  Andubon  Rd. 
"  "         "       "     Franklin  Pk. 

"       "     Strandway. 
Eastern  Storage  Co. 
A.  A.  Row^e  &  Son. 


Stable  Foremen. 

FIRST  PRIZE. 
Michael  Bradley 
H.  F.  Boyd 
Geo.  R.  Carter 
M.  J.  Commins 
James  J.  Dale 
Wm.  W.  Dickson 
Chas.  J.  Dillon 
Wm.  Donahue 
Wm.  T.  Dunbar 
Martin  Gilleo 
John  Gilpin 
Thomas  Harding 
Dennis  Healey 
John  Heussey 
D.  Howard 
Wm.  Hurst 
James  Jennings 
Herbert  L.  Johnson 
Wm.  Johnson 
Henry  LaCroix 
Wm.  Lenigar 
W.  P.  Meehan 
Everett  P.  Mclntire 
Thomas  E.  Mooney 
Michael  ]\Iorgan 
John  Silliker 
Louis  H.  Steinberg 

SECOND  PRIZES. 

Wm.  H.  Allen 
J.  G.  Hodsdon 
Fred.  H.  Plyer 


Stable  Nightmen. 

FIRST  PRIZE. 
Levi  Clark 
Albert  Corbett 
Fred.  Downs 
Frank  W.  Eldredge 
James  Meehan 


MEN  AND  HORSES. 


One  fact  has  often  forced  itself  upon  the 
attention  of  the  Directors,  namely,  that  the 
welfare  of  the  work-horse  is  bound  up  with 
the  welfare  of  the  men  who  drive  and  care 
for  him.  In  stables  where  the  men  are  well 
paid  and  are  treated  with  kindness  and  con- 
sideration by  the  proprietors,  the  horses,  in 
turn,  are  well  treated  by  the  men,  and  look 
sleek  and  contented.  On  the  other  hand,  in 
stables  where  there  is  a  bad  feeling,  or 
utter  want  of  good  feeling,  between  the  em- 
plover  and  his  men,  the  horses  suffer  ac- 
cordingly. Recognizing  these  facts,  some 
l)ublic-spirited  women  in  New  York  and 
also  in  Chicago  have  recently  organized 
clubs  for  teamsters,  and  even  clubs  for 
teamsters'  wives.  This  is  a  step  in  the  right 
direction. 

Bad  teamsters  seem  to  gravitate  natu- 
rally to  employers  who  do  not  really  care 
about  their  horses.  If  the  owner  is  a  hu- 
mane man,  the  spirit  of  humanity  will  per- 
vade his  whole  business.  If  he  is  cruel,  or 
simply  indifferent,  a  spirit  of  brutality,  or 
at  least  of  selfish  indifference,  will  run 
through  his  force. 

The  highly  developed  nervous  system  of 
the  horse  renders  him  peculiarly  capable  of 
suffering.  Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops 
far  short  of  absolute  brutality,  keeps  him 
in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation. 
.\nvone  who  is  accustomed  to  observe 
horses  can  tell  by  a  single  glance  at  a  given 
horse  whether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad,  or 
indifferent  one.  The  expression  of  the  ani- 
mal's eye  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears  tell 
the  story  unmistakably. 

There  are  many  teamsters  who  treat  the 
horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and  there- 
fore are  guilty  of  C(  ml  inual  cruelty  toward 
him,  which  reacts  on  their  own  characters. 


Such  men  miss  the  opportimity  of  their 
lives,  and  their  daily  labor  becomes  a  deg- 
radation and  a  curse  to  them. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  man}-  hu- 
mane drivers,  who  have  a  real  affection  for 
their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in 
their  appearance.  These  men  make  good 
husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens ;  and 
their  daily  lal)or  is  not  onl}-  a  means  of 
livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of  happi- 
ness. To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is 
the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association. 

QUALITY  IX  WORK  HORSES. 

Our  judges  are  instructed  not  to  award 
blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  to  any  horse,  no 
matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is 
a  horse  of  good  type  and  quality.  Quality, 
it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in 
a  work  horse  as  in  a  race  horse.  Quality 
might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness 
of  texture  which  good  breeding  produces. 
The  bone  in  a  well-bred  horse  is  more 
dense  and  less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a 
coarse-bred  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course, 
that  well-bred  horses  are  sometimes  defi- 
cient in  quality,  but  no  horse  has  quality 
unless  he  is  well-bred.  The  horse  with 
quality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less 
subject  to  disease  and  to  unsoundness  of 
feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse. 
Consequently  it  is  more  humane  to  use 
horses  with  quality  than  those  without 
(|uality.  Quality  and  beauty  are  usually 
found  together,  and  yet.  as  all  horsemen 
know,  one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A 
horse  may  have  quality  without  being  in 
the  least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may 
have  a  yewe  neck,  a  large  head,  long  ears, 
a  Roman  nose,  a  swav  back,  flat  sides,  slack 


loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a  rat  tail ; 
and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silk}-,  if  his 
head  thous^h  large  is  bony  and  well-cut.  if 
his  ears  thous^^h  long-  are  well-shaped,  if  his 
lei^s  are  flat  and  clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are 
of  fine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has 
quality.  Horses  of  the  Shire  and  Clyde 
breeds  often  look  coarse  at  first  sight  on  ac- 
count of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy  legs, 
but  in  the  best  specimens  of  these  breeds 
the  long  hair  about  the  fetlocks  is  fine  and 
silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not  hand- 
so!iie.  are  clean-cut. 

Quality  is  thus  described  by  Professor 
Rufus  C.  Obrecht  of  the  University  of 
Illinois :  "Quality  in  a  horse  is  of  prime 
importance.  This  term  when  applied  to 
horses  has  reference  to  their  bones,  skin. 


hair,  and  muscles.  Its  presence  is  shown 
Ijy  clean-cut  features  of  the  head ;  firm, 
clean  bone;  tendons  well  defined;  close  fit- 
ting, glove-like  skin;  hair  fine  and  silky; 
an  abundance  of  finish  and  absence  of 
coarseness,  but  not  necessarily  small  bone. 
When  slightly  exerted  the  skin  will  show 
clearly  an  intricate  net  work  of  veins. 
Coarse  hair  is  usually  associated  with  a 
coarse  skin  and  a  soft  spongy  bone  which 
is  weak  and  subject  to  disease.  With  qual- 
ity the  muscles  stand  out  prominently  and 
are  clearly  defined,  which  aids  in  giving  a 
horse  finish.  Quality  is  a  strong  indication 
of  the  extent  of  a  horse's  endurance.  These 
two  characteristics  are  closely  associated, 
and  a  horse  lacking  in  quality  is  compara- 
tively a  cheap  animal." 


(DistiibuU-a  by  the  Mass.  S.  P.  C.  A.) 

To  THEE,  MY  MASTER,  I  offer  my  prayer  :  Feed  me,  water  and  care  for  me,  and,  when  the 
day's  -work  is  done,  provide  me  with  shelter,  a  clean  dry  bed  and  a  stall  wide  enough  for  me  to  lie 
down  in  comfort. 

Always  be  kind  to  me.  Talk  to  me.  Your  voice  often  means  as  much  to  me  as  the  reins. 
Pet  me  sometimes,  that  I  may  serve  you  the  more  gladly  and  learn  to  love  you.  Do  not  jerk  the 
reins,  and  do  not  whip  me  when  going  up  hill.  Never  strike,  beat  or  kick  me  when  I  do  not  under- 
stand what  you  want,  but  give  me  a  chance  to  understand  you.  Watch  me,  and  if  I  fail  to  do  your 
bidding,  see  if  something  is  not  wrong  with  my  harness  or  feet. 

Do  not  check  me  so  that  I  cannot  have  the  free  use  of  my  head.  If  you  insist  that  I  wear 
blinders,  so  that  I  cannot  see  behind  me  as  it  was  intended  I  should,  I  pray  you  be  careful  that  the 
blinders  stand  well  out  from  my -eyes. 

Do  not  overload  me,  or  hitch  me  where  water  will  drip  on  me.  Keep  me  well  shod.  Examine 
my  teeth  -when  I  do  not  eat,  I  may  have  an  ulcerated  tooth,  and  that,  you  know,  is  very  painful.  Do 
not  tie  my  head  in  an  unnatural  position,  or  take  away  my  best  defense  against  flies  and  mosquitoes 
by  cutting  off  my  tail. 

I  cannot  tell  you  when  I  am  thirsty,  so  give  me  clean  cool  water  often.  Save  me,  by  all  means 
in  your  power,  from  that  fatal  disease — the  glanders.  I  cannot  tell  you  in  words  when  I  am  sick,  so 
watch  me,  that  by  signs  you  may  know  my  condition.  Give  me  all  possible  shelter  from  the  hot  sun, 
and  put  a  blanket  on  me,  not  when  I  am  working,  but  when  I  am  standing  in  the  cold.  Never  put  a 
frosty  bit  in  my  mouth;  first  warm  it  by  holding  it  a  moment  in  your  hands. 

I  try  to  carry  you  and  your  burdens  without  a  murmur,  and  wait  patiently  for  you  long  hours 
of  the  day  or  night.  Without  the  power  to  choose  my  shoes  or  path,  I  sometimes  fall  on  the  hard 
pavements  which  I  have  often  prayed  might  not  be  of  wood  but  of  such  a  nature  as  to  give  me  a  safe 
and  sure  footing.     Remember  that  I  must  be  ready  at  any  moment  to  lose  my  life  in  your  service. 

And  finally,  O  MY  MASTER,  when  my  useful  strength  is  gone,  do  not  turn  me  out  to  starve 
or  freeze,  or  sell  me  to  some  cruel  owner,  to  be  slowly  tortured  and  starved  to  death  ;  but  do  Thou, 
My  Master,  take  my  life  in  the  kindest  way,  and  your  God  will  reward  you  here  and  hereafter.  You 
will  not  consider  me  irreverent  if  I  ask  this  in  the  name  of  Ilim  who  was  born  in  a  Stable. — Amen. 


BULLETIN  No.  1,    ISSUED  IN  DECEMBER,  1909. 


WATERING  AND  BEDDING. 


During  the  past  five  months  an  agent  of 
this  Association  has  visited  157  stables, 
including  almost  all  the  large  livery  and 
boarding  stables,  in  Boston  and  the  neigh- 
boring cities  and  towns.  One  object  of 
these  inspections  was  to  ascertain  the  prac- 
tice in  regard  to  watering  the  horses  during 
the  night,  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay, 
and  in  regard  to  bedding  them  in  the  day 
time,  as  well  as  at  night,  especially  on  Sun- 
days. The  agent  submits  the  following  re- 
port : — 

THE  WATERING  OF  HORSES  AT 
NIGHT. 
In  most  cases  all  the  hay  which  horses 
in  the  city  receive  is  fed  to  them  at  night. 
It  is  therefore  especially  important  that 
they  should  be  watered  during  the  night.  In 
an  inspection  of  over  150  of  the  leading  hv- 
ery  and  boarding  stables  in  Boston  and  the 
vicinity,  particular  attention  was  paid  to 
this  matter.  All  authorities  agree,  and  ex- 
perience teaches,  that  city  horses  should  be 
watered  between  8  P.  M.  (9  P.  M.  would 
he  better)  and  midnight;  but  it  was  found 
that  less  than  half  of  the  stables  visited  give 
their  horses  water  after  7  P.  M. 

And  yet  more  stablemen  volunteered  in- 
formation on  this  subject  than  upon  any 
other  matter  considered  in  the  five  months 
•during  which  the  investigations  were  made. 
"A  horse  comes  in  hungry,"  was  the  usual 
way  of  putting  it,  "and  he  wants  his  sup- 
per so  much  that  he  will  drink  but  little; 
and  he  ought  not  to  drink  deeply  at  that 
time,  even  if  he  wanted  to.  Then  he  eats 
a  quantity  of  dry,  heating  food.  He 
shouldn't  have  water  right  after  eating; 
but  if  he  doesn't  get  a  good  drink  two  or 
three  hours  later,  he  will  go  through  the 


night  thirsty,  and  the  heating  food  will 
burn  out  his  insides  for  the  lack  of  the 
water  that  is  needed  to  give  the  nourish- 
ment of  the  food  a  chance  to  do  the  good  it 
ought  to  be  doing."  Moreover,  a  horse  not 
watered  at  night  is  very  apt  to  drink  too 
much  in  the  morning. 

This  night  watering  is  not  onlv  common 
humanity  in  hot  weather,  but  it  is  almost 
equally  valuable  in  winter.  For  appetite 
comes  with  the  bracing  effect  of  cold 
weather,  and  horses  eat  more  than  they  do 
in  summer.  Consequently,  if  this  extra  food 
is  to  do  its  part  in  giving  the  horse  power 
to  resist  the  cold  and  the  strain  of  winter 
work,  water  must  be  given  at  the  time 
when  it  will  do  the  most  good,  which  is,  in 
most  cases,  between  8  and  10  P.  AI.,  or 
even  later.  Nothing  does  so  much  toward 
giving  back  a  return  for  the  food  given  in 
the  way  of  extra  strength,  working  endur- 
ance and  good  condition. 

The  effect  of  this  night  watering  on  the 
blood  and  general  circulation  is  far  reach- 
ing. The  thirst  that  follows  the  digestion 
of  a  meal  is  the  call  of  nature  for  the  water 
that  is  needed  to  help  the  good  of  the  food 
to  get  into  the  flesh  and  blood  of  the  ani- 
mal;  and  equally  important  is  the  part 
plaved  by  the  water  in  sending  the  waste 
matter  out  of  the  body  with  the  least  pos- 
sible wear  and  tear  on  the  organs  that  per- 
form this  indispensable  duty.  A  horse  that 
remains  thirsty  all  night  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  last  so  long  as  one  that  is  wa- 
tered at  the  proper  time.* 

*If  anyone  doubts  whether  horses  need  watering 
at  night,  let  him  go  into  a  stable,  sav  at  9  v.  yi., 
turn  loose  the  horses  which  have  not  been  watered 
since  they  were  fed.  and  observe  how  eagerly  they 
will  make  for  the  watering-trough.— H.  C.  M. 


r.EDDIX'G  AND  REST. 

There  were  twenty-five  horses  in  a  stable 
not  far  from  T.oston  that  was  visited  one 
Sundav  mornino-.  The  horses  were  a  fair, 
averao-e  lot  of  the  kind  used  in  delivery 
wagons  and  in  general  business.  Most  of 
them  were  in  reasonably  good  working  or- 
der, and  the  stable  had  the  appearance  of 
i  e'Pg  well-kept. 

Of  the  twenty-five  horses  in  the  stable, 
twentv-four  were  standing  up  and  just  one 
was  Iving  down.  In  twenty-four  stalls 
there  was  no  bedding;  in  one  there  was  a 
good  supply.  One  doesn't  have  to  be  a 
wizard  to  guess  that  the  horse  that  was 
getting  a  needed  rest  was  in  the  same  stall 
with  the  bedding.  All  the  other  horses 
were  being  deprived  of  what  might  be  the 
best  part  of  their  Sunday,  namely,  the  op- 
portunity of  taking  their  weight  off  legs 
and  feet  that  usually  have  all,  and  more 
than  they  can  do  to  stand  the  strain  of  the 
week-day  wear  and  tear. 

In  another  stable  there  is  a  horse  that 
works  in  a  single  grocery  wagon.  He  is  be- 
tween the  shafts  three  days,  but  every 
fourth  day  remains  in  the  stable.  Each 
morning  brings  him  exactly  the  same 
breakfast,  and  there  is  absolutely  nothing  in 
the  care  given  that  tells  him  wdiether  he  is 
to  go  out  or  stay  in.  But  he  knows  how 
to  keep  his  own  calendar,  and  every  fourth 
morning,  just  as  soon  as  he  has  finished 
eating,  he  lies  down  in  comfort  on  the  plen- 
tiful supply  of  bedding  which  is  kept  under 
every  horse  in  that  stable  at  all  times ;  and 
he  frequently  stays  down  the  better  part  of 
the  day. 

In  still  another  stable  there  are  pairs  of 
horses  that  are  used  half  a  day  and  rested 
the  other  half.  Encouraged  by  plenty  of 
bedding,  they  have  formed  habits  of  resting 
their  legs  and  feet  at  every  possible  oppor- 
tunity. 

There  is  an  old  saying  that  a  good  city 
horse  could  use  up  four  sets  of  legs  and 
feet.  This  means  that  a  large  part  of  his 
bodily    strength   and   endurance   is   wasted 


because  lameness  and  suft'ering  wear  out 
the  unfortunate  animal  long  before  his 
time.  "His  shoulders  is  all  gone  savin'  his 
legs,"  was  the  way  one  stableman  described 
the  condition  of  a  horse  who  had  worked 
his  body  muscles  to  pieces  in  trying  to  ease 
the  strain  on  his  battered  legs  and  feet. 

As  in  the  case  of  watering  at  night,  the 
extra  expense  of  giving  a  day-time  bed  to 
a  horse  is  slight,  compared  with  the  great 
benefit  gained  from  the  rest  and  chance  for 
repairs  given  the  legs.  The  good  that 
comes  out  of  this  is  reflected  in  the  condi- 
tion of  the  whole  body;  and  all  who  own 
horses  should  see  that  this  chance  for 
needed  rest  is  given  their  horses  whenever 
they  are  in  the  stable.  A  horse  will  not  lie 
down  on  stable  planks  unless  worn  and 
weary  beyond  the  point  where  it  is  right  to- 
use  any  animal. 

STATISTICS. 

Stables  in  which  the  horses  are  both 
watered  at  night,  after  eating  their 
hay,  and  are  also  bedded  in  the  day- 
time          30- 

Stables  in  which  they  are  watered  at 
night,  but  not  bedded  in  the  day- 
time         42- 

Stables  in  which  they  are  bedded  by 
dav,  but  not  watered  during  the 
night   27 

Stables  in  which  they  are  neither 
watered  at  night  nor  bedded  during 
the  da}' 3^ 

Stables  as  to  which  the  information 
was  untrustworthy 22 

Total    157 

GILBERT  TOMPKIXS, 

Agent. 

The  Directors  of  this  Association  earn- 
estly submit  the  foregoing  facts  and  obser- 
vations to  owners  of  work-horses  and  to 
keepers  of  boarding  and  livery  stables, 
partly  as  a  matter  of  economy,  but  still 
more  as  a  matter  of  humanity. 


BULLETIN  No.  2.    ISSUED  IN  MAY,  J9t0. 
THE  DISPOSAL  OF  OLD  HORSES. 


The  world  owes  a  duty  to  the  old,  worn- 
out  horse,  and  many  events  of  recent  oc- 
currence show  that  the  community  is  hc- 
i^innins;'  to  realize  this  fact.  It  is  as  cruel 
as  it  is  irrational  to  treat  him  like  an  old 
machine,  to  he  disposed  of  in  any  manner 
whatever,  when  he  has  ceased  to  be  useful 
to  his  master.  He  is  a  creature  equally 
capable  with  man  of  suffering-  pain.  In 
fact,  the  horse,  owing  to  the  painful  dis- 
eases to  which  he  is  subject  in  the  bones  of 
the  feet  and  legs,  may  truly  be  described  as 
the  most  unfortunate  animal  in  the  world. 

It  is  known  to  everybody  familiar  with 
the  subject  that  certain  forms  of  lameness, 
especially  spavin,  produce  a  peculiar  emaci- 
ation and  shrinking  of  the  loins  of  the 
horse,  simply  from  pain.  It  is  impossible 
to  keep  such  a  horse  fat  even  if  he  does  no 
work  whatever.  What  then  must  be  his 
sufferings  when  he  is  compelled  to  work 
every  day,  and,  as  is  often  the  case,  to  haul 
heavy  loads ! 

If  the  horse  could  cry  out  when  he  was 
in  pain  the  world  would  not  endure  his  suf- 
ferings for  a  (lav. 

Moreover,  the  nervous  system  of  the 
horse  greatly  tends  to  increase  his  suffer- 
ings. In  nine  cases  out  of  ten  the  horse  is 
a  more  nervous  animal  than  the  man  who 
drives  him,  and  more  likely  to  be  annoyed 
and  worried  Ijy  little  things. 

For  these  reasons  and  many  others  that 
might  be  mentioned,  it  is  the  duty  of  every 
horse-owner  to  refrain  from  selling  his  old 
horse  as  he  would  sell  a  thing  without  life 
or  feeling.  It  is  true  that  some  men  still 
take  the  opposite  view.  For  example,  a 
member  of  a  well-known  lumber  concern  in 


Boston  recently  said :  ''We  buy  horses  for         j 
what  there  is  in  them  and  dispose  of  them         i 
when  they  are  no  longer  suitable  for  us;        ^ 
we  have  no  sentiment  in  the  matter  at  all." 
Such  men,  we  are  thankful  to  say,  are  be- 
coming  fewer  in  numljer,  and  the  time  is 
net  very  far  distant  when  they  will  be  re- 
garded with  abhorrence  l:)y  the  community 
in  general. 

The  State  of  Xew  York  passed  a  law  in 
1907  providing  that  worn-out  horses  in  the 
fire  department  and  other  departments  of 
the  city  of  New  York  shall  not  be  sold  at 
auction  as  was  formerly  the  case,  but  shall 
be  handed  over  to  the  Humane  Society  in 
that  cit\-,  which  agrees  to  take  care  of  them. 
A  similar  law  was  passed  in  Massachusetts 
in  the  year  1908.  The  Massachusetts  law 
provides  that  any  cit}-  or  town  in  the  Com- 
monwealth may  turn  over  old  or  disabled 
horses  that  have  been  used  in  the  fire  de- 
partment, or  in  any  other  department  of  the 
city  or  town,  to  Red  Acre  Farm,*or  to  any 
other  incorporated  charitable  society  for  the 
care  and  protection  of  horses.  The  law 
l)rovides  that  such  horses  shall  never  be 
sold  or  given  away,  but  shall  remain  in  the 
custody  of  the  society  taking  charge  of 
them. 

Several  years  ago  a  horse  that  had  long 
done  service  in  Maine  for  the  United 
States  government  was  pensioned  for  life 


*Red  Acre  Farm  is  about  25  miles  frcm  Bostcn 
in  the  town  of  Stow.  The  raih-oad  station  and  post 
office  are  South  Acton  on  the  Fitchburg  branch  of 
the  Boston  and  Maine  R.  R.  The  tek  phone  is 
West  Acton  No.  8.  Any  horse,  sent  by  anybody 
from  any  place,  will  be  received  at  the  Farm  and 
cared  for.  If  the  owner  is  unable  to  pay  anything, 
nothintr  will  be  charcred. 


by  the  government.  This  fact  was  stated  in 
a  Maine  newspaper,  and  thence  it  was 
quoted  in  newspapers  all  over  the  country, 
and  invariably  with  approval. 

Of  course  it  cannot  be  expected  that  no- 
body should  ever  sell  a  horse ;  but  every 
owner  of  horses,  and  especially  large  firms 
and  corporations,  should  draw  the  line 
somewhere.  In  the  first  place,  they  should 
lay  down  a  rule  that  no  horse  that  has  be- 
come worn-out  in  their  service  should  be 
sold,  and,  secondly,  their  disposal  of  horses 
not  worn-out,  but  still  unfit  for  their  partic- 
ular work,  should  be  as  humane  as  is  pos- 
sible under  all  the  circumstances  of  the 
case.  It  seems  almost  incredible  that  after 
a  horse  has  served  his  owner  for  many 
years  he  should,  in  his  old  age,  be  sold  to 
the  first  pedlar  or  other  person  that  comes 
along ;  and  yet  that  is  sometimes  done.  For 
example,  two  years  ago  a  horse  that  had 
been  owned  and  worked  by  a  trucking  firm 
for  fifteen  years,  and  had  become  worn-out 
and  really  unfit  for  any  labor,  was  sold  to 
the  first  purchaser  that  appeared  in  the 
stable  without  inquiry  or  investigation. 

It  is  plain  that  the  disposal  of  the  horse 
should  depend  upon  several  circumstances. 
First,  on  the  wealth  of  the  owner,  for  ob- 
viously a  rich  man  or  firm  can  afiford  to  be 
more  humane  than  a  poor  man.  Secondly, 
it  should  depend  upon  the  age  and  condi- 
tion of  the  horse.  And,  thirdly,  on  the 
number  of  years  he  had  been  used  by  the 
concern.  Corporations  in  which  everything 
is  done  by  rule,  no  allowance  being  made 
for  individual  cases,  should  at  least  make  it 
a  rule  not  to  sell  horses  who  have  labored 
for  them  for  a  certain  number  of  years,  say, 
ten  years  and  upwards.  Such  horses,  to 
use  a  common  expression,  "owe  them  noth- 
ing." When  these  animals  become  unfit  for 
further  use,  the  corporation  should  either 
kill  them  or  make  some  other  humane  dis- 
position of  them. 


Another  way  of  getting  at  the  matter  is 
to  fix  a  price  below  which  a  horse  should 
not  l)e  sold.  Many  firms,  for  example,  do 
not  sell  a  horse  that  will  not  bring  $50  or 
more  in  the  market.  If  his  market  price  is 
lower  than  that,  they  cause  the  horse  to  be 
killed.  Another  firm  fixes  the  price  at  $75, 
and  mercifully  kills  any  horse  whose  mar- 
ket value  falls  below  that.  For  this  pur- 
pose $75  certainly  is  none  too  high  as 
things  now  are.  The  price  of  horses,  espe- 
cially of  second-hand  horses,  is  so  ex- 
tremely high  that  it  is  really  difficult  to  pur- 
chase in  any  Eastern  city  for  less  than  $75 
a  horse  that  can  be  worked  without  actual 
cruelty. 

But  if  the  old,  worn-out  or  lame  horse  is 
to  be  sold,  at  least  let  some  care  be  taken 
to  find  a  good  home  for  him — or  a  home  not 
so  bad  as  the  worst.  There  is  now  such 
a  demand  for  cheap  horses  that,  with  some 
trouble,  it  is  possible  to  make  a  selection 
among  purchasers.  This  does  not  amount 
to  much,  but  it  is  a  little  better  than  selling 
to  the  first  customer. 

The  most  humane  owners  are  those  who 
never  sell  a  discarded  horse.  Thus  a  well- 
known  coal  dealer,  when  questioned  on  this 
subject  said:— "When  a  horse  is  no  longer 
good  for  us,  he  is  not  good  for  any  one 
else.  We  shoot  him."  This  sounds  rather 
harsh  :  is  death  the  best  rew^ard  that  the  old 
horse  can  expect  for  long  years  of  faithful 
service?  Yes.  it  is;  and  death  is  a  thou- 
sand times  more  humane  than  to  sell  the 
old  horse,  or  even  to  give  him  away.  No 
old  horse,  in  fact,  should  ever  be  given 
away.  Lend  him  if  you  will ;  but  keep  track 
of  him,  and  get  him  back  if  he  is  being 
abused.  Long  experience  has  convinced 
the  writer  of  this  Bulletin  that  only  about 
one  man  in  a  hundred  will  take  good  care  of 
a  horse  for  which  he  has  paid  nothing. 

And  here  it  should  be  said,  parentheti- 
cally, that  Ijv  far  the  most  humane  manner 


of  killing  a  horse  is  t(j  sIkjoI  liini.  A  horse 
can  he  killed  hy  the  use  of  chloroform,  hut 
the  operation  is  difficult  and  recjuires  an  ex- 
pert. I"V)ra  man  without  special  knowledge 
or  experience  to  attempt  to  kill  a  horse  in 
tiiis  way  might  he  a  matter  of  great  cruelty. 
Some  horrible  scenes  have  been  witnessed 
when  an  inexperienced  man  has  endeavored 
to  chloroform  a  horse. 

Great  care  also  should  he  taken  to  make 
sure  that  the  horse  which  the  owner  in- 
tends to  be  killed  really  is  killed,  and  is  not 
sold  by  some  corrupt  em])loyee.  Several 
months  ago,  a  horse  in  Uoston  was  in- 
trusted to  a  stable  hanger-on  to  be  led  to  a 
rendering  company  and  killed.  A  black- 
smilli  saw  the  horse  as  he  was  being  led 
through  the  streets  and  bought  him  from 
the  man  in  charge  for  $50.  Another  case 
of  the  same  sort  occurred  not  long  before; 
and  recently  an  agent  of  the  M.  S.  P.  C.  A. 
happened  to  overhear  a  conversation  be- 
tween a  man  on  the  sidewalk  and  the  driver 
of  a  dead-horse  wagon  as  to  the  purchase  of 
a  horse  led  behind  the  wagon.  The  agent 
compelled  the  driver  to  shoot  the  horse  then 
and  there. 

Some  horse-owners,  esjiecially  corpora- 
tions, have  large  farms  in  the  countrv,  or 
have  some  connection  with  a  farm  where 
they  send  such  of  their  horses  as  are  fit  for 
light  work,  but  no  longer  fit  for  city  work. 
The  Adams  Express  Company,  for  ex- 
ample, has  a  fanu  in  Pennsylvania  where 
125  horses  can  be  pastured.  Other  owners 
send  their  horses  to  farms  owned  by  them- 
selves or  by  their  friends  or  relatives,  and 
this  method  of  disposing  of  the  old  horse  is 
certainly  to  1)e  commended,  provided  that 
sufficient  care  is  taken  in  the  selection  of 
the  farm.  But  to  sell  or  give  a  horse  to  a 
farmer — to  any  chance  farmer — without 
making  sure  that  he  is  of  the  right  sort,  is 
about  as  dangerous  a  thing  as  could  be  done 
with  him.     Farmers  in  general   feed  their 


horses  less  grain  and  take  less  care  of  them 
than  an\  other  horse-owners  in  the  world. 
As  a  rule  they  also  give  them  almost  no 
cleaning  and  little  or  no  bedding.  Every 
farmer  has  an  opportunity  to  procure  bed- 
ding at  very  slight  cost.  There  is  always 
meadow^  hay  which  he  can  cut  on  his  own 
land  or  obtain  for  nothing,  or  almost  that, 
on  the  land  of  another,  and  it  is  also,  of 
course,  always  possible  for  a  farmer  to  dry 
the  liedding  which  he  uses,  for  he  has  an 
unlimited  amount  of  space  and  sun.  There 
is,  therefore,  every  reason  why  a  farmer's 
horse  should  be  well  bedded.  LUit  as  a  mat- 
ter of  fact,  the  farmers'  horses  are  apt  to 
lie  on  hard  boards  even  in  winter.  Almost 
all  horses  used  in  the  city  are  w'ell  grained, 
and  the  old  horse  whose  grain  is  suddenly 
withdrawal,  suffers  much  for  want  of  it. 
Even  in  a  rich  pasture,  an  old  horse  accus- 
tomed to  grain  will  rapidly  fall  0&  in  flesh 
if  he  no  longer  receives  it. 

Those  who  look  upon  the  farm  as  a  sort 
of  paradise  fof  horses  think  of  it  only  in 
suiumer  when  the  grass  is  sweet  and  the 
trees  afford  a  pleasant  shade ;  but  for  the 
greater  part  of  the  year  the  grass  is  dead, 
and  the  horse  is  kept  in  a  barn  which  is  apt 
to  be  full  of  holes,  cold,  and  in  every  way 
uncomfortable. 

Some  horse-owners  manage  to  carry  their 
old  horses  along,  giving  them  such  light 
work  as  they  are  fit  to  perform,  and  finally 
keeping  them  in  the  stable  most  of  the  time 
and  in  some  cases  all  the  time.  This,  we 
are  glad  to  say,  is  largely  the  practice  of 
the  Txiston  Elevated  Railway  Company  and 
of  the  Metropolitan  Coal  Company  in  Bos- 
ton. In  a  big  concern  the  hay,  grain  and 
bedding  that  a  few  old  horses  require 
would  add  very  little  to  the  expense  of  the 
stable.  Old  horses  so  kept  on  are  not  sub- 
jected to  the  homesickness  wdiich  is  caused 
b}-  new  sm-roundings,  nor  are  they  sepa- 
rated   from    their    old     companions.      Any 


stable  keeper  of  experience  will  testify  that 
when  a  pair  of  horses  is  broken  up,  one  be- 
ing sold  or  otherwise  disposed  of,  the  one 
that  is  left  behind  will  lose  fiesh  and  spirit, 
and  it  will  be  long  before  he  recovers  from 
his  silent  grief  at  the  loss  of  his  mate. 

To  sum  up : — The  best  thing  that  can  be 
(lone  for  the  old,  worn-out  horse  is  of 
course  to  give  him  a  good  home  in  the 
country — such  a  home  as  it  is  exceedingly 
hard  to  find.  The  next  best  thing  is  to  keep 
him  in  his  old  stall  in  the  city  stable,  where 
he  becomes  a  guest — no  longer  a  boarder, 
hut  practically  a  pensioner,  freely  supported 
in  consideration  of  his  past  services.  The 
third  best  fate  for  the  old  horse  is  the 
■  swift  bullet  that  saves  him  from  a  slow 
death  by  semi-starvation,  cold,  pain  and 
homesickness. 

]\Ian  works  for  his  living, 
I  work  for  my  death. 

Shall  we  refuse  him  even  this? 

HEXRY  C.  MERWIN. 


SUMMARY. 

In  making  this  investigation  76  concerns 
were  interviewed.  Of  these  16  sell  their 
horses  while  still  comparatively  young. 
The  remaining  60  are  classified  as  follows, 
a  few  appearing  in  more  than  one  of  the 
groups. 

1  Concerns  which  never  sell  a  horse 

below  $75 I 

2  Concerns  which  never  sell  a  horse 

below  $50 5 

3  Concerns     which      put      worn-out 

horses  on  their  own  or  relatives' 

or  carefully  selected  farms 15 

4  Concerns  exercising  care  regarding 

whom  they  sell  to 16 

5  Concerns    which    keep    old    horses 

until  their  condition  is  such  that 
they  must  be  killed 14 

6  Concerns  which   kill    their    horses 

when  no  longer  fit  for  the  work 
required  of  them   14 

7  Concerns   which   sell   to   the   first 

comer     11 

8  Unclassified  concerns,    from    new- 

ness of  stables,  deficient  informa- 
tion, etc 5 


LIST    OF     ADV 


Albie.ht,  William 

Allston  Hand  Laundry.  . 
American  Coal  Company 

Apostolu    Brothers 

Atlantic  Works • 

Atwood  lV  McManus  •  •  •  • 

Babcock,  E.  J 

Babcock,   PVank   M 


Badger,  E.  B  cV  Co 44 

Bain  Bros.  Co 84 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Limited 56 

Bartlett,  A.J 86 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co 7- 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co 44 

Bellevue  Hotel 7- 

Berry,  C  &  Co 7° 

Blinn,  Morrill  .^-  Co. 76 

Boston  Badge  Co 28 

Boston  Bundle  Wood  Co 84 

Boston  F'orge  Co SS 

Boston  Flag  Pole  Co 66 

Boston  Industrial   Home  Inc 60 

Boston  Molasses  Co 64 

Boston  Transfer  Co. 46 

Bradford,  John  A.  Coal  Co 86 

Breck,  Joseph  &  Sons  Corp 58 

Brigham,  C.  Co 60 

Brockway- Smith  Corp 42 

Buck,  C.  H.  &  Co 80 

Buckminster  Hotel -"O 

Butler,  C.  .^'  Co 86 

Capillo  C.  Co 80 

Carter's  Ink  Co.,  The 58 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co 74 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co 82 

City  Laundry 24 

Clement,  W."  A 88 

Commonwealth   Hospital 80 

Connor,  John  T 98 

Cronin  &  Foss 66 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 32 

Dennett,  Erastus 96 

Doherty  &  Daly 66 

Dorchester  Ice  Co 74 

Dover  Stamping  &  Mfg.  Co 7° 

Driscoll,  J.  C 74 

East  Boston  Gas  Light  Co.  (Chelsea  Div.)  48 

Eastern  Storage  Co 92 

Eldridge  BakeV  Co 4° 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co 88 

Fearing,  Whiton  &  Co 92 

Fells  Ice  Co 78 

Ferguson,  J.  G.  &   B.  S'. 5° 

Forgie's,  James  Sons 5° 

Fox,  Geo.  G.  Co 78 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 84 

Gahm,  Joseph  &  Son 72 

Gove,  Austin  ^:  Son  Inc 86 

Hanley,  Dr.  James  F 78 

Harris,  E.  S.  .^'  Son 76 

Hathaway,  J.  A.  eV:  Co 88 

Higgins,''w.  J 7^ 

Hood,  H.  P.  &  Sons 26 

Houghton  c^Dutton 38 

Hovey,  C  F.  &  Co 34 

Hovev,  U.  A.  kCo. 84 

Howard,  G.  B  &  Co 76 

Hoyt,  The  Co 92 

Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Corp. 56 

Jordan  Marsh  Co 32 

Kelly  Peanut  Co 72 

Kennett,  R.  A.  •  •    5° 

Kinneen,  B.  cS:  Co ^4 

Lemav,  A.  A 9° 

Locke  Coal  Co 84 


EIRTISEIRS 

London  Harness  Co 58 

Lowney,  The  Walter  M.  Co.    22 

Lvndonville  Creamery    Association 80 

Magee's  East  Bosfon  Express 86 

Maiden  Coal  Co 66 

Maiden  Electric  Co 34 

Marine  Towel  Supply  Co 9° 

Marsh,  J.  A.  Coal  Co 66 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co 20 

Morse  .'v:  Whyte,  The  Co 34 

McCall,  F.  H 92 

McDonald,  The  W.  M.  Co 81 

McEnany,  J.  W 62 

McGreevey  &  Co «o 

McKenney  c^  Waterbury  Co 54 

McKinnon,  Wm.  F 88 

Monarch  Typewriter 38 

McQiiesten,  George  Co 64 

Newcomb,  J.  S.  &  Co 84 

Oak  Grove  "Farm  (Alden  Bros.  Co.) 4.4 

O'Brien ,  Fulton 82 

Perry,  Chas.  H. 92 

Pierce,  S.  S.  Co. 18 

Plant,  Thos.  G.  Co i^^ 

Priest  &  Smith 3^^ 

Pureoxia  Co.,  The - 78 

Red  Acre  P'arm 7o 

Revere  House   A^> 

Rescue  Mission.  The  Wood  c^  Coal  Yard -78 

Richardson,  J.  H '''''^ 

Robinson,  W.  M 74 

Roessle  Brewery 4^> 

Rosenfeld,  M 9° 

Rowe,  A.  A.,k  Son 82 

Schwalm,  John 9" 

Seaverns  Piano  Action  Co 80 

Shattuck  &  Jones  54 

Smith,  C.  B.,&  Bro 7^ 

Smith,  D.  A.,  Co 66 

Smith,  G.  W.  &  F.,  Iron  Co 78 

Smith,  J    B 98 

South  Boston  Roofing  Co.   ..-.    72 

Star  Brewing  Co 42 

Stetson  Coal  Co.,  The 68 

Stillman  Bottling  Co ...  92 

Stone,  W.  P.,  &  Co 7° 

Sturtevant  &  Haley  Co 82 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co 5^6 

Sullivan,  J.  H 72 

Talbot,  J.  C 70 

Tassinari,  V.,  &  Co.  86 

Taylor  Bros.'  Laundry,  Inc 3^ 

Teele,  F.  A, ■ 9° 

Thompson's  Express  Co 54 

Tighe,  J.T.,Co 80 

Trimount  Laundry 80 

Tinglev,  W.  J '4 

Tisdale',  Wilson  Co 32 

Toomey  &  Ormon 58 

Triantafel,  Geo.  E 9° 

United  Basket  Co. 62 

ITnion  Glass  Co 82 

I'nion  Steam  Sponging  Works 86 

Walworth  Mfg.  Co' <^M 

Waterhouse,  L.  A 88 

Webster  Charcoal  Co 84 

Wellington-Wild  Coal  Co 52 

Whiting,  D.,  &  Son 3" 

Whittemore,  W.  P.,  Co 48 

Wheeler.  McElveen  S:  Co 56 

White,  R.  II.,  Co 68 

Whitney,  J.  W 92 

Woodberrv,  D.  S.,  &  Co 4^ 

Woods.  John  M.,  &  Co 3^ 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 66 


BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


19  11 


CATALOGUE 


Boston  Work-Horse  Parade 
Association 


(INCORPORATED) 


NINTH   ANNUAL   PARADE 


May  30th,  191 1 


THE  WOODBERRY  PRESS 
27  Beach  St.,  Boston 


DIRECTORS 


HENRY  C.   MERWIN,   President, 

State  House,  Room  35(). 

ARTHUR  PERRIN,  Vice-President,         FRANCIS  PEABODY,  Jr.,  Vice-President, 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline  Devonshire  Building. 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD,  Secretary, 

101  Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3rd,  Treasurer, 

City  Hall. 

GEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON,  Mattapoisett.       AUSTIN  PETERS,  M.  R.  C.  V.  S., 
JOHN  H.  JEWETT,   IGl  High  Street.  Jamaica  Plain. 

H.  P.  McMANUS,  Atwood  &  McManus,  Chelsea.    W.  D.  QUIMBY,  79  Portland  Street. 
F.  H.  ROWLEY,  President  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  45  Milk  Street. 


AGENTS 


A.  G.  MERWIN,  General  Agent. 
15  Beacon  Street. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Special  Agent, 
42  Mt.  Vernon  Street,  Boston. 

JAMES  MEREDITH,  Inspector, 
208  Everett  Street,  East  Boston. 


OFFICE,    (OPEN  THROUGHOUT  THE   YEAR) 

15  BEACON  STREET,  ROOM   27 


WORK-HORSE    PARADES 


HE  Work-Horse  Parade  originated  in  England,  and  for 
many   years  it  has  been  an  annual  event  in  London 
and   Liverpool.     The    first  parade  of  the  kind  in  this 
country  was  held  in  Boston  on  Memorial  Day,  May  30, 
1903,  by  ten  or  twelve  men  who  had  previously  been 
unacquainted  with  one  another,  but  who  were  drawn 
together  by  their  interest  in  horses, —  especially  in  the 
ill-treated  horse.     Soon  afterward  they  were  incorpo- 
rated under  the  name  of  the  "Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association;" 
and  we  beg  that  all  humane  persons  who  have  property  to  dispose  of  will 
bear  this  title  in  mind. 

The  Association  has  no  endowment  whatever,  and  the  difficulty  in 
raising  the  money  necessary  to  carry  out  the  parade  is  very  great.  Several  of 
the  Directors  devote  to  it  far  more  time  and  energy  than  they  can  afford 
to  expend,  outside  of  their  regular  occupation;  and  the  want  of  funds  is 
a  continual  source  of  anxiety.  Every  year  the  Parade  increases  in  size 
and  consequently  in  expense,  and  the  very  success  of  the  Association  seems 
likely  to  prove  its  ruin.*  It  is  only  through  the  great  generosity  of  a  few 
men  and  women,  among  whom  are  the  widow  and  relatives  of  the  late 
R.  A.  Lawrence,  the  founder  and  first  President  of  the  Association,  that 
the  Parade  has  been  maintained  for  the  past  few  years.. 

The  Parade-idea  is  gradually  extending  over  the  continent,  and,  in 
every  case,  so  far  as  we  know,  the  Boston  Parade  has  served  as  a  model. 
This  is  true  of  New  -York,  Philadelphia,  Chicago,  Buffalo,  New  Orleans, 
Seattle,  San  Francisco,  Toronto  and  Halifax. 

*THE   NUMBER   OF    FIRMS   REPRESENTED   IN   THE   PARADE 

Year     1911     1910     1909     1908     1907     1906     1905     1904     1903 
460      357      300      258      233      181      203      174      154 

TOTAL   NUMBER   OF   ENTRIES 

Year     1911     1910     1909     1908     1907     1906     1905     1904     1903 
1016     906      847      738      685      593      530      444      433 

PRIZES    AWARDED 

Year  1st  2d  3rd  4th  5th     H.  C.  Special  Totals 

1910  499  208  91  3  17  68  866 

1909  404  197  77  7  30  83  802 

1908  362  155  70  5  23  34  655 

1907  237  147  97  59  39  43  625 

1906  165  129  94  91  24  38  543 

PRIZES    TO    VETERAN    DRIVERS 

Year     lull     1910     1909     1908     1907     1906 
30      38      37      19      23      24 

DRIVERS'   CERTIFICATES    OR   BADGES 

Year     1911     1910     1909     1908     1907     1906 


It  gives  us  the  greatest  pleasure  to  send  copies  of  our  circulars,  catalogues 
instructions  to  judges,  and  other  documents  to  any  society  or  person  who 
contemplates  the  holding  of  a  Parade;  and  all  persons  are  at  liberty  to 
reprint  and  publish  the  circulars  and  Bulletins  issued  by  this  Association. 
In  particular  cases,  we  shall  be  glad  to  furnish  information  and  advice  by 
personal  letters  or  interviews.  We  have  a  collection  of  slides  for  a  stere- 
opticon  display  of  pictures  of  work-horses  and  other  horses,  and  we  are 
happy  to  lend  these  to  any  association  or  person  desiring  to  use  them. 

THE  AMERICAN  WORK-HORSE  PARADE 

There  is  a  marked  diflerence  between  the  English  Parade  and  the 
American  Parade.  The  English  affair  is  mainly  a  Horse-Show  of  animals 
owned  by  rich  corporations  and  concerns;  whereas  in  our  Parade  every 
effort  is  made  to  reach  and  benefit  the  poor  man  and  the  poor  man's  horse. 
In  all  classes,  except  the  championship  classes,  age  counts  in  favor  of  the 
horse.  The  older  the  horse  the  higher  he  is  graded,  provided  that  his 
condition  is  good;  and  neither  blindness  nor  blemishes  disqualify  him. 
The  most  interesting  part  of  the  Parade  is  the  Old  Horse  class,  and  that  is 
distinctly  the  poor  man's  opportunity.  The  highest  honors  in  our  Parade 
are  the  two  gold  medals, — the  Lawrence  medal  for  four-horse  teams,  cared 
for  by  the  driver,  and  the  gold  medal  for  the  best  old  horse.  This  last 
prize  has  been  offered  seven  times;  four  times  it  was  taken  by  a  man  who 
owned  only  the  single  horse  which  he  exhibited;  and  once  it  was  taken 
by  a  man  who  owned  only  two  horses. 

Moreover  in  the  classes  where  horses  are  most  apt  to  be  owned  by 
poor  men,  we  offer  many  special  prizes  of  money  and  street  blankets. 
These  are  the  huckster,  barrel-rack  and  local  express  classes. 

The  Old  Horse  Class  was  originated  by  this  Association,  and  it  has 
been  a  success  wherever  tried, — not  only  in  Work-Horse  Parades,  but  at 
Cattle  Shows  and  County  Fairs.  We  earnestly  recommend  this  class  to 
the  managers  of  Horse  Shows  and  Fairs  throughout  the  country. 

Another  novelty,  tried  with  great  success  last  year,  is  the  class  for 
Reconstructed  Horses,  that  is,  horses  that  were  run  down  by  neglect 
or  ill-usage  and  have  been  restored  to  health  and  strength  by  a  new  owner. 

OUR  AGENTS 

During  former  years  we  have  employed,  most  of  the  time,  one  or  more 
Agents  to  go  about  among  the  poorer  class  of  stables,  and  assist  the  owners 
of  the  horses  with  advice,   medicine  and  other  means.     Much  good  was 

4 


done  in  this  way.  Men  who  treated  their  horses  with  cruelty  were  warned, 
and  extreme  cases,  especially  those  of  horses  incurably  lame  or  otherwise 
unfit  for  work,  were  reported  to  the  Massachusetts  S.  P.  C  A.  In  such 
cases  that  Society  will  be  found  prompt  to  act. 

During  the  past  year,  for  want  of  funds,  we  have  been  obliged  to 
discontinue   this   missionary   work. 

MEETINGS  FOR  DRIVERS 

Two  "  Smoke  Talks  "  for  Drivers,  Stablemen,  and  all  persons  inter- 
ested in  horses,  were  held  in  Kingsley  Hall,  at  which  an  address  was  made 
by  Dr.  Rowley,  President  of  the  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  and  stereopticon  pictures 
of  work-horses  were  shown  and  explained  by  the  President  of  the  Asso- 
ciation. These  meetings  w^ere  largely  attended  and  were  very  successful. 
The  same  pictures  were  shown  by  request  at  Wellesley  College,  at  the 
Baptist  Church  in  Winthrop,  at  a  meeting  of  the  South  Worcester  Agri- 
cultural Society  in  Southbridge,  and  at  Providence,  R.  I.,  under  the  auspices 
of  the  Rhode  Island  Humane  Education  Society.  One  of  our  Directors 
attended,  at  his  own  expense,  the  meeting  of  the  American  Humane  Asso- 
ciation at  Washington,  D.  C,  in  October,  1910,  making  an  address  on 
Work-Horse  Parades;  and  we  were  represented,  on  the  same  terms,  by  a 
Director  who  assisted  at  the  Halifax  Parade  in  September. 

RED  ACRE  FARM  AND  PINE  RIDGE 

We  act  as  agents  for  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses  at  Stow, 
and  inquiries  about  the  Farm,  and  how  horses  can  be  sent  there,  will  be 
answered  at  any  time  by  letter  or  telephone.  Any  horse,  which  is  a  subject 
for  charity,  may  be  sent  to  the  Farm  by  anybody,  at  any  time,  without 
notice;  and  the  animal  will  be  cared  for.  The  post-ofifice  address  of  the 
Farm  is  South  Acton,  Mass.  The  railroad  station  is  South  Acton.  The 
telephone  is  West  Acton  8. 

Under  the  laws  of  Massachusetts  (Chap.  133  of  the  Acts  of  the  year 
1908)  cities  and  towns  may  turn  over  their  old  or  disabled  horses  to  Red 
Acre  Farm,  or  to  any  other  incorporated  society  for  the  relief  of  dumb  animals. 
Boston,  Somerville,  Brookline,  Waltham  and  other  municipalities  have 
availed  themselves  of  this  law,  instead  of  selling  the  animals  at  auction. 

Pine  Ridge,  the  annex  at  Dedham  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League,  is 
ready  at  any  time  to  receive  horses  that  need  rest  or  treatment.  Appli- 
cation should  be  made  to  the  League  at  51  Carver  Street,  Boston.     Pine 


Ridge  is  only  10  miles  out,  and  is  thus  a  convenient  place  in  which  to  give 
horses  a  vacation. 

There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  conmiunity  that  old  and  worn-out 
or  painfully  lame  horses  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  other- 
wise disposed  of  in  a  humane  manner.  To  sell  a  worn-out  horse,  and  thus 
consign  him  to  a  slow  and  painful  death,  w^ll  be  looked  upon  years  hence 
as  an  almost  incredible  cruelty. 

BULLETINS 

The  Association  issued  last  year  a  Bulletin  on  Feeding  and  Watering, 
by  Gilbert  Tompkins.  This  Bulletin  has  been  widely  read  and  highly 
commended.  It  is  reprinted  at  the  end  of  this  catalogue,  w^here  will  be 
found  also  a  Bulletin,  now  first  published,  on  Vacations  for  Work-Horses. 
We  believe  it  to  be  a  fact  that  an  annual  vacation  for  the  work-horse,  and 
especially  for  the  old  work-horse,  is  a  matter  not  only  of  humanity,  but  of 
economy. 

A  Bulletin  answering  the  question — "  Will  the  Motor- Wagon  take  the 
place  of  the  Work-Horse?"  by  Gilbert  Tompkins,  may  be  had  on  applica- 
tion.    It  is  an  unprejudiced  and  careful  examination  of  the  subject. 

Another  Bulletin  on  a  subject  most  important,  but  never  yet,  we 
believe,  practically  treated,  namely,  the  feeding  of  Work-Horses  in  the  cityf 
will  be  prepared  and  published  as  soon  as  we  have  the  money  to  pay  for  it. 

THE  STABLE  INSPECTION 

The  most  important  activity  of  this  Association,  next  to  the  Parade, 
and  perhaps  not  second  to  that,  is  the  system  of  Stable  Inspection. 

Entries  for  this  may  be  made  at  any  time,  and  by  stables  of  all  kinds, 
including  livery,  hack  and  boarding  stables.  There  is  no  entry  fee.  The 
stables  are  judged,  not  in  competition  wnth  one  another,  but  accordingly 
as  they  satisfy  the  standard  fixed  by  the  Association.  The  prizes  are  un- 
limited in  number,  and  consist  mainly  of  silver  medals,  awarded  to  the 
Ijrojjrietors  and  to  foremen  and  nightmen.  The  stables  and  the  foremen 
are  not  always  graded  alike.  Sometimes  a  foreman  makes  poor  use  of  the 
facilities  at  his  command,  and,  more  often,  a  good  foreman  has  to  struggle 
against  poor  facilities  and  bad  drivers.  The  Inspectors  are  the  most 
expert  and  impartial  men  that  we  can  find  in  Boston  or  elsewhere.  Their 
reports  are  confidential,  and  are  communicated  only  to  the  proprietor  of 
the  stable. 


Among  the  pointsconsidercd  by  the  Inspectors  are  quahty  and  quantity 
of  hay  and  grain,  watering,  bedding,  blanketing,  grooming,  ventilation, 
stalls,  sanitary  condition  of  stable,  and  the  handling  of  the  horses  by  grooms 
and  drivers. 

The  stable  inspection  is  availed  of  more  and  more  every  year,  espe- 
cially by  large  concerns.  We  had  74  entries  this  year,  and  the  total  number 
of  horses  in  the  stables  inspected  was  about  three  thousand. 

Many  large  concerns,  especially  corporations,  leave  their  stable  man- 
agement wholly  to  subordinates,  and  often  do  not  know  whether  it  is  good 
or  bad,  or  how  it  could  be  improved.  There  are  men  working  alone  at 
night  in  large  stables,  old  employees  in  many  cases,  as  to  whom  the  question 
is  never  asked  whether  they  do  their  work  well  or  ill.  Most  of  these  men 
are  faithful.  A  few  of  them  have  been  unearthed  by  our  stable  Inspectors, 
and  it  is  pathetic  to  see  how  pleased  and  surprised  they  are  to  find  that  any 
human  being  takes  an  interest  in  them  or  in  their  work. 

No  amount  of  system  can  compensate  for  the  want  of  this 
personal  interest  in  the  horses  and  in  the  men  who  take  care  of 
them.  It  should  be  the  business  of  some  person  in  authority  in  every 
concern  to  know  how  the  horses  look  and  feel,  whether  the  men  in  charge 
are  faithful  or  not,  how  long  they  have  been  in  the  service,  what  sugges- 
tions they  have  to  make,  and  so  forth.  It  seems  to  be  the  policy  of  many 
large  corporations  and  firms  to  treat  men  and  horses  alike  as  if  they  were 
machines.     This  is  not  good  "  business,"  to  say  nothing  of  humanity. 

Our  Inspectors  have  found  the  most  common  faults  in  Work-Horse 
stables  to  be  as  follows: — 

(1)  Scanty  bedding. 

(2)  Failure  to  bed  the  horses  on  Sundays  and  holidays  in  the  daytime. 

(3)  Failure  to  water  the  horses  at  night  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay. 

(4)  Failure  to  keep  the  horses'  feet  soft. 

(5)  Poor  grooming. 

Appended  is  a  copy  of  the  printed  form  for  the  Inspector's  report:— 
"The  Inspectors  are  requested  to  report  on  the  following  matters  and 
any  others  that  may  occur  to  them : — 

1.  How  the  horses  are  brought  to  the  stable  by  the  drivers,  whether  in 
a  heated  condition  or  not. 

2.  Manners  and  appearance  of  the  horses,  as  showing  whether  they  have 
been  handled  kindly  or  roughly. 

3.  Bodily  condition  of  horses. 

4.  Condition  of  horses'  feet. 

5.  Are  the  horses  well  groomed? 

7 


6.  "  Examine  the  horses  for  galls  or  other  sores,  and  state  how  many,  if  any, 
are  galled. 

7.  Is  the  harness  clean  and   well  oiled;  and  especially  are  the  insides  of 
the  collars  clean? 

8.  Ventilation  of  stable  and  hay  loft. 

9.  Cleanliness  of  stable,  hay  loft  and  watering  troughs. 

10.  Drainage,  and  disposal  of  manure. 

11.  Temperature  of  stable ;  and  whether  the  horses  are  subjected  to  draughts 
or  not. 

12.  Size  and  character  of  stalls — width  and  length. 

13.  Amount  of  bedding;  and  are  the  horses  bedded  during  the  day  on  Sun- 
days, and  when  they  stand  in  the  stable  on  other  days? 

14.  Hours  of  feeding  and  watering  ;  and  especially  are  the  horses  watered 
after  eating  their  hay  at  night? 

15.  Quality  and  amount  of  hay  and  grain  fed. 

16.  Bran  mash, — when  given. 

17.  Salt,  when  and  how  given. 

18.  Blanketing  of  horses  in  stable. 

19.  (In  large  stables)  is  there  a  drying  room  for  blankets? 

20.  Are  there  rain-covers  for  the  horses,  or  two  sets  of  blankets — one  for 
wet  weather? 

Remarks :        


Signature  of  Inspector." 
Date 

For  the  prizes  awarded  this  year  to  stables  and  stablemen  see  the 
pages  at  the  end  of  the  entry  list. 

The  Association  is  indebted  to  the  following  Stable  Inspectors  for 
their  very  careful  and  conscientious  work: — 

H.  P.  McManus  J.  W.  Whitney 

R.  A.  Kennett  J.  H.  RoLLiN 

Gilbert  Tompkins  Robert  Mason 

Joseph  B.  Matthews 


NINTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1911 

'NY  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  or  out 
of  condition  will  be  disqualified. 

Every    entry    not   disqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon, 
either  first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow^).     In  the 
Old  Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons  are  awarded, 
which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other  classes. 
Each  blue  ribbon  winner  will  receive  a  brass  medal  to  be  worn  as  a 
permanent  ornament  on   the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be 
aw^arded.  The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  de- 
served, subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(1)  Age  counts  in  fa^"or  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green  horses, 
and,  if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  aw^arded  to  any  horse, 
unless  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type  and 
good  quality.* 

MANNERS 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the  horse  has 
been  treated  kindly. 

COLOR 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 

THE  VEHICLE 

The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  tor  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry,  or  reduce  the 
grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 

THE  HARNESS 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especially  in  the 
collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by 
reason  of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in 
the  harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  and  inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case 
of  pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 


^For  what  is  meant  by  quality,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  catalogue. 


Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of  it, 
is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in 
respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required. 
Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments 
should   not   be  used. 

Housings  for  collars,  except  for  use  in  rain-slorms,  are  strongly  dis- 
appro\  ed  by  the  Association  as  being  unnecessary,  expensive,  and  adding 
to  the  weight  of  the  harness. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association,  and  shown  in  a 
photograph  printed  in  this  catalogue,  weighs  only  53  pounds,  collar  and  all, 
anfl  it  is  big  enough  for  any  13o0-pound  horse.  Horses  of  that  weight 
freciuenlly  carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The  bridle  shown  in 
the  photograph  weighs  less  than  two  pounds — about  half  the  usual  weight. 

DRIVERS'  BADGES 

A  medal  or  badge,  to  be  worn  on  the  person,  will  be  given  to  every 
driver  who  show-s  in  the  Parade,  in  good  condition  and  serviceably  sound, 
the  same  horse  or  horses  shown  by  him  in  the  Parade  of  the  year  before. 
(In  case  of  four-horse  teams,  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  were 
shown  by  him  the  previous  year.) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  dri\'er,  all  things 
considered;  and  silver  badges  will  be  given  to  the  twenty  who  rank  next. 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  be  ambitious  to 
obtain  one  of  these  badges,  and  that  possession  of  the  badge  will  be  the 
best  recommendation  that  a  driver  could  have. 

SPECIAL  PRIZES 

In  memory  of  R.  A.  Lawrence,  its  first  President,  the  Association 
offers  a  gold  medal  to  the  owner  and  a  silver  medal  to  the  driver,  for  the 
best  four-horse  team  in  the  Parade,  provided  also  that  the  driver  takes 
care  of  his  horses.     There  are  second  and  third  prizes  in  this  Class. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums 
of  money,  are  offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse  and  other  classes 
by  the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelt\ 
to    Animals,    American    Humane    Education    Society,     Animal     Rescue 

*In  1910  the  gold  badge  was  awarded  to  George   Fred  Seamoii,  employed  by  Shattuck  Sc  Jones,  and  the 
following  received  silver  badges:  — 

Timothy  Ahem  Leonard  Cook  James  Hagerty  Thomas  J.  Lonergan 

William  J.  Burrows  William  E.  Denvir  Henry  Harvey  Jere  O'Neil 

Frederick  H.  Collins  Frank  F.  Dolahu  Frank  J.  Higgins  James  H.  Padden 

S.  J.  Richardson 
10 


League,  Red  Acre  Farm,  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan,  Mrs.  A.  G.  Merwin,  Mrs. 
Arthur  Foote,  Miss  Katharine  Foote,  Miss  Juha  H.  Worthington,  Mrs. 
Amanda  E,  Dwight,  George  W.  Harrington,  W.  D.  Quimby,  Benj.  W.  Wells, 
J.  W.  Whitney,  James  Forgies'  Sons,  The  London  Harness  Company,  and 
others.     These  will  be  found  specified  in  the  entry  list  below. 

DRIVING  COMPETITION 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four-horse  teams  will  be  held  in  or  near 
Commonwealth  Avenue,  while  the  judging  is  taking  place.  Entries  for 
this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first  prize  will  be 
a  silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 

U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  who 
have  horses;  of  these  there  are  about  thirty-five.  Their  yearly  allowance 
for  providing  and  maintaining  a  horse  and  wagon  is  only  $350.  This 
sum  is  very  inadequate.  The  men  do  their  best,  but  their  horses  and 
wagons  make  a  poor  showing.  Only  one  has  made  an  entry  in  the  Parade 
of  191L 

NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing-stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing-stand 
at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclosed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  always  apparent,  frequently 
exclude  a  fine  horse,  or  -team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 
and  that  green  horses  are  discriminated  against. 

SYSTEM  OF  JUDGING  IN  1911 

Those  classes  in  which  special  prizes  are  awarded,  namely.  Fire  De- 
partments, Old  Horses,  Reconstructed  Horses,  Four-Horse  Teams,  Owners 
and  Foremen's  Runabout  Horses,  Barrel-Racks,  Hucksters,  Local  Expresses, 
and  the  five  Championship  classes,  will  be  judged  as  formerly,  that  is,  by 
two  Judges  for  each  class,  who  will  inspect  the  horses,  and  see  them  move. 
The  other  classes,  comprising  about  four-fifths  of  the  Parade,  will  be  judged 
by  one  set  of  Judges  in  the  following  manner:  — 

As  soon  as  the  classes  are  in  order,  the}^  will  start  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand  with  a  distance  of  twenty  feet  between  each  entry. 

11 


A  veterinary  surgeon  will  be  stationed  about  50  yards  down  the  line, 
and  the  light  horses  will  approach  him  at  a  slow  trot,  the  heavy  horses 
at  a  walk.  He  will  inspect  them  as  they  come  toward  him,  will  halt  them 
if  necessary,  and  will  shunt  off  from  the  line  any  that  are  lame.  Those 
not  so  removed  will  proceed  at  a  walk,  and  will  be  judged  by  two  experts 
stationed  50  yards  further  toward  the  reviewing-stand.  They  will  "  size 
up  "  the  horses  as  they  approach,  will  halt  them  for  a  moment,  if  necessary, 
and  will  then  decide  on  the  grade  of  ribbon  which  the  entry  is  to  receive, — 
or  will  decide  that  the  entry  is  to  receive  nothing;  and  their  decision, 
without  announcing  it  to  the  driver,  will  be  telephoned  by  an  assistant 
to  the  reviewing-stand.  Each  entry  carries  a  number  corresponding  with 
the  number  in  the  catalogue,  so  that  this  can  easily  be  done.  Printed  tags 
will  be  on  hand,  to  be  affixed  to  each  entry, — but  only  for  use  in  case  some 
accident  should  happen  to  the  telephone.  In  this  way  it  is  believed  that  the 
judging  will  be  more  uniform  and  satisfactory,  and  much  time  will  be  saved. 

NOTICE  TO  THE  PUBLIC 

Is  it  not  possible,  we  are  often  asked,  for  a  man  to  have  a  few  good- 
looking  horses  in  the  Parade,  while  at  home  he  has  five  or  ten  times  as 
many  in  poor  condition?  We  answer,  no.  We  reserve  the  right  to  inspect 
all  the  horses  in  the  stable  of  an  applicant  for  a  place  in  the  Parade;  and 
every  year  we  exclude  many  entries  on  the  ground  that  the  owner's  treat- 
ment of  his  horses  in  general  is  not  humane.  In  other  cases,  when  the  treat- 
ment of  the  owner's  horses  is  good  in  most  respects,  but  not  up  to  the 
standard  in  others,  we  request  the  owner  to  make  such  reforms  as  are 
needed;  and  it  is  very  seldom  that  he  refuses. 

The  advertising  value  of  a  place  in  the  Parade  is  now  very  great, 
and  we  intend  that  no  inhumane  owner  of  a  horse  shall  have  the  benefit  of  it. 

The  Public  may  take  the  presence  of  a  horse  in  this  Parade 
as  an  assurance  that  the  owner  is  a  humane  man  in  his  treatment 
of  horses  generally. 

Our  judges  are  selected  upon  the  same  principle. 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE 

Horses  walked  on  starting  out  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and 
at  night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy, 
or  if  the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if 
wet  from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar  and 
saddle. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in 
summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only, 
horses  wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge 
on  coming  in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing 
the  horse,  much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not 
much,  on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses     watered     when     cool,     then 

hayed,    watered    again,     and     grained. 

(In  any  case,  watered  at  night,  after  eating 

their  hay.  This  is  especially  necessary  in  summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down   all   day   Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sun- 
day noon;  cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter. 

Horses  salted  in  the  bran  mash,  or 
otherwise,  with  regularity. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that, they  can  lie 
with  heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or 
grated  in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the 
drivers  up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub, 
for  the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all — Horses 
handled  gently,  neither  struck,  nor 
yelled  at,  nor  sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE 

Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing 
hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and 
horses  rushed  into  stalls  without  rub- 
bing, cleaning  or  sponging. 

Horses'    legs   washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no 
matter  how  hot;  or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until 
the  horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating 
their  hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night, 
and  horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given — too  much 
trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody 
happens  to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean;  sweat  allowed  to 
accumulate  on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway,  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their 
being  cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put 
up  dirty. 

Stable  close — no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the 
horses  heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  even- 
ing and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken;  doors  left  open; 
cold  draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot 
nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in 
charge;  no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — -Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about;  general  atmosphere  of 
noise  and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out 
or  put  up,  nor  on  Sundays. 


13 


WILLIAM  D.  QUIMBY 


Cfjaplain 

THE  REV.   FREDERICK  M.  WHITE 


^ttl£i 


Francis  Pearody,  Jr. 
Arthur  Perrix 
John  H.  Jewett 
H.  P.  McManus 
James  I.  Brooks 
Robert  F.  Atwood 


Fred  L.  Jordan 
Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon 
John  W.  Whitney 
Albert  B.  Lewis 
R.  D.  Carter 
Phillip  S.  Greeley 


©eterinarp  3Sngpector 

DR.  FRANK  J.  SULLIVAN 


Robert  ].  Taylor 


MsJljers; 


A.  L.  Berry 


3\nh^t^ 


ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  J.  M. 

BAKER.  JAMES  E. 
BALKAM.  DR.  R.  W. 
BARTLETT,  \V.   R. 
BRIGHAM,  \V.  E. 
BARNES,  DR.  \V.  E. 
BOLGER,  DR.  D.  L. 
BUNKER,  DR.  MADISON 
BUTLER,  W.  L. 

CLEAVES,  DR. 
COL  DWELL,  E.  F. 
COLE,  W.  K. 
COLLINSON,  C.  M.  B. 
COPLEY,  A.  H. 

DELANO,  DR    CHAS.  W. 
DELANEY,  D.  J. 
DEWS,  DR.   HARRY 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 


DUMMER,  R.  G. 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 

FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 

GILLIGAN,  J.  T. 
GORDON,  JOHN 

HARDING,  R.  W. 
HARRINGTON,  GEO.  W. 
HARRISON,  CAPT.  RODEN 
HILL,  DR.  A.  G. 
HOLDEN,  C.  B. 

KENNETT,  R.  A. 
KENNEY,  J.  R. 

LANGLAN,  THOS. 

MASON,  T. 
MASON,  ROBERT 


MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MAY,  DR.  A.  W. 
MEREDITH,  JAMES 
MERWIN,  A.  G. 
MURRAY,  R.  H. 

OSGOOD,   DR.  F.   H. 

PERRY,    DR.   CHAS.    H. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 

ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,  J.  E. 
ROLLIN,  DR.  J.  H. 

SOUTHER,  DR.  H.  A. 
SULLIVAN,  I.  H. 
SULLIVAN,  DR.  F.  J. 

WADSWORTH,  DR.  S.  F. 
WHITTEMORE,  W.  P. 


THE  FOLLOWING  DRIVERS  ACT  AS  AIDS  IN 
THEIR  RESPECTIVE  CLASSES 


THOMAS  J.  GREEN,  . 
HOWARD  R.  PHILLIPS, 
DAVID  SMITH, 
F.  H.  AMES, 
JOHN  J.  KENNEY, 
WILLIAM  T.  LOCKNEY, 
JOHN  BRONKHORST, 
FRED  DE  CORSEY, 
WILLIAM  M.  WHITE, 
W.  H.  BELTIS, 
CLARENCE  E.  JONES, 
DANIEL  HAYES, 
ALFRED  J.  GODDARD. 
WM.  H.  BRYSON, 
CHAS.  W.  DENNETT, 
DANIEL  F.  COLLINS, 
JOHN  A.  MOREHOUSE, 
FRED  STODDARD, 
DANIEL  SMIDDY, 
NYRON  R.  MERRIFIELD, 
GUILFORD  SAUNDERS, 
MICHAEL  ROCK, 
CHRISTOPHER  F.  WILLARD, 
JOSEPH  A.  LEACH, 
JOHN  T.  KILDUFF, 
PHILLIP  H.  BOYD, 

GEORGE  FRED  SEAMON, 
ALEXANDER  McQUEEN, 

WILLIAM  VAUGHN, 

CHARLES  VAUGHN, 
JAMES  GORMAN, 
WILLIAM  B.  SMITH, 
J.  J.  BRADY, 
WILLIAM  B.   LOUD, 
ROBERT  F.  ATWOOD, 
GEORGE  H.   WASCOTT, 
FREDERICK  E.  WEIR, 
GEO.  H.  CARTER, 
GEORGE  W.  YOUNKERS, 
RALPH  E.  HARRINGTON, 
L.  C.  BIERWEILER. 


Cities  and  Towns. 

Milk. 

Bakers. 

Laundries. 

Deliveries,  Miscellaneous. 

Deliveries,  Department  Stores. 

Furniture. 

Provisions,  Light  Horses. 

Provisions,  Heavy   Horses. 

Confectioners. 

Grocers. 

Public  Service  Corporations. 

Oil  Dealers. 

Manufacturers. 

Builders  and  Building  Material. 

Metals  and  Junk. 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers. 

Mules. 

Hay  and  Grain. 

Lumber. 

Ice. 

Contractors. 

Coal. 

Coke  and  Charcoal. 

Truckmen. 

LawTence  Gold  Medal. 

(Four-horse  teams.) 
Championship  Singles,  Light  Horses. 
Championship  Singles,  Middleweight 

or  Wagon  Horses. 
Championship  Doubles,  Middleweight 

or  Wagon  Horses. 
Championship  Singles,  Heavy  Horses. 
Championship  Doubles,  Heavy  Horses. 
Old  Horses,  Division  A. 
Old  Horses,  Division  B. 
Old  Horses,  Division  C. 
Old  Horses,  Division  D. 
Old  Horses,  Division  E. 
Old  Horses,  Championship. 
Reconstructed  Horses. 
Barrel  Racks. 
Hucksters. 
Express. 


CONTRIBUTORS,  191 1 


Allen,  Miss  S.  M. 

American  Humane  Kducation  Society 

Ames,  Mrs.  VV.  B. 

Angell,  Mrs.  G.  T. 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Bacon,  Miss  M.  P. 

Bancroft,  D.  M. 

Bancroft,  Major-Gencral  Wm.  A. 

Bartlett,  Miss  Fanny 

Bartlett,  Nelson  S. 

Baylies,  Walter  C. 

Beebe,  E.  Pierson 

Blake,  Mrs.  Arthur  W. 

Blake,  Mrs.  M.  L. 

Boit,  Mrs.  R.  A. 

Bossert,  Miss  Annie 

Boston  Ice  Company 

Bryant,  Mrs.  E.  B. 

Cabot,  Mrs.  A.  T. 

Cambridge  Gas  Light  Company 

Campbell,  C.  A. 

Carr,  Samuel 

Clark,  Eliot  C. 

Clarke,  M. 

Clarke,  H.  M. 

Chase,  Mrs.  Theodore 

Cobb,  Mrs.  J.  S. 

Crocker,  G.  G. 

Crofts,  Miss  Clemence 

Cunningham,  Frederic 

Deland,  Mrs.  Margaret 
Dempsey,  P.  &  Co. 
Dexter,  Gordon 
Devlin,  Mrs.  John 
Dwight.  Mrs.  A.  E. 

Eaton,  Miss  Julia  F. 
Endicott,  William 
Evans,  Mrs.  R.  D. 

Fish,  Frederick  P. 
Fisher,  Miss  A.  E. 
Foote,  Mrs.  Arthur 
Foote,  Miss  Catharine 
Forbes,  J.  M. 
Forgan,  Miss  E.  K. 
Forgies,  James,  Sons 

Gay,  Mrs.  J.  S. 
Gilman,  O.  B. 
Greene,  Mrs.  E.  F. 

Hayes,  Miss  M.  H. 
Harrington,  Geo.  W. 
Hart,  G.  G. 
Hittinger,  Mrs.  Jacob 
Hittinger,  Jacob 
Hooper,  Mrs.  A.  W. 
Howe,  A.  E. 
Hunt,  William  D. 
Hudson,  Mrs.  John  E. 

James,  George  Abbot 
Jarves,  Miss  Florence 
Jordan,  Fred  L. 

Keith,  B.  F. 
Kennard,  Mrs.  C.  W. 
Kidder,  Chas.  A. 


Lang,  Miss  Rosamond 
Lawrence,  A.  A. 
Lawrence,  Miss  Madeline 
Lawrence,  John 
Lawrence,  Mrs.  R.  Ashton 
Lawrence.  Mrs.  R.  H. 
London  Harness  Co.,  The 
Lowell,  Miss  Georgina 

Manning,  Miss  A.  F. 
Manning,  F.  H. 
Marble,' Mrs.  T.  J. 
Mason,  Miss  E.  F. 
Mason,  Miss  Ida  M. 
Mass.  S.  P.  C.  A. 
Merwin,  Mrs.  Arthur  Gilbert 
Mixter,  Miss  M.  C. 
Moores,  Mrs.  F.  J. 
Morrison,  Mrs.  B.  T. 
Morrison,  Mrs.  John  H. 
Morse,  J.  T.,  Jr. 
Moseley,  Miss  Ellen  F. 

New  England  T.  &  T.  Co. 

Parker,  F.  S. 
Parker,  Mrs.  W.  L. 
Parsons,  The  Misses 
Peabody,  Francis,  Jr. 
Peabody,  Mrs.  Francis,  Jr. 
Peters,  F.  A. 
Phelps,  Miss  M.  W. 
Phillips,  Mrs.  John  C. 
Pickman,  D.  C. 
Pillsbury,  A.  E. 
Porter,  Mr.  &  Mrs.  A.  S.,  Jr. 
Putnam,  Miss  O.  W. 
Putnam,  Miss  S.  G. 

Quimby,  W.  D. 

Rackemann,  Chas.  S. 
Red  Acre  Farm 
Richardson,  Mrs.  C.  F. 
Richardson,  Dr.  W.  L. 
Rodman,  Miss  Emma 

Saltonstall,  R.  M. 
Sawyer,  Clifford  D. 
Shattuck,  Dr.  Geo.  B. 
Shimmin,  Miss  Blanche 
Spencer,  Henry  G. 
Stackpole,  Miss  Roxana 
Staniford,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Swift,  H.  W. 

Tarbell,   Miss  Catherine 
Thayer,  Mrs.  E.  R. 
Tyson,  Mrs.  E.  D. 

Ward,  Miss  E.  J. 
Wells,  Benj.  W. 
White,  Mrs.  W.  W. 
Whitney,  John  W. 
Wheelwright,  Miss  Mary  C. 
Wigglesworth,  Geo. 
Williams,  R.  B. 
Worthington,  Mis?  Julia  H. 
Wright,  John 

Young,  Mrs.  B.  L. 


16 


Note:  — Add  to  this  list 

George  G.  Hal 


Mrs.  David  Nevins 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that  dri\er  in 
the  Parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  em- 
ployer, or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  The  Association  gives  a  second  prize 
of  five  dollars,  and  also  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in  this  class  (the  prize 
winner  excepted)  w'hose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME   OF   DRIVER 


NAME   OF   EMPLOYER 


Years  of 
Service 


WILLIAM  T.  DUNBAR 
JOHN  B.  FAY 
DANIEL  F.  COLLINS 
JAMES  GORMAN 
JOHN  J.  GREEN 
JOHN  HOWARD 
LEWIS  B.  LIBBY 
TIMOTHY  J.  O'CONNOR 
JAMES  SPIKES 
WM.  B.  SMITH 
JOHN  L.  SULLIVAN 
NYRON  R.  MERRIFIELD 
JAMES  F.  WALKER 
W.  F.  MEESE 
MICHEL  DEVEREAUX 
CHAS.  S.  MOORE 
ROBERT  K.  PATERSON 
PATRICK  SULLIVAN 
CHARLES  WHITE 
MICHAEL  F.  BURKE 
JOHN  F.  CONNERS 
MELVILLE  DICKIE 
CLARENCE  E.  JONES 


Atlantic  Works  20 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co.  20 

Dover  Stamping  &  Mfg.  Co.  22 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co.  22 

City  of  Boston  (St.  Dept.)  23 

Howard  Brothers  23 

P.  S.  Huckins  Company  23 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co.  23 

C.  F.  Eddy  &  Co.  23 

Boston  Forge  Co.  23 

City  of  Boston  (Sanitary  Dept.)  23 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co.  24 

C.  W.  Walker  Co.  24 

L.  A.  Waterhouse  25 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co.  26 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  26 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co.  26 

City  of  Boston  (Sanitary  Dept.)  26 

A.  F.  Carpenter  26 

City  of  Boston  (Pk.  Dept.)  27 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co.  27 

Standard  Oil  Co.  27 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.  27 
17 


"(^isa" 


Ceylon  Tea 

Pure  Rich  Fragrant 


I    LB. 

CANISTERS 
60  CENTS 

1-2    LB. 
CANISTERS 
35   CENTS 


Packed  in  Parchment-lined 
One  pound  and  lialf-pound  Canisters 

WE    INVITE    COMPARISON    WITH    OTHER    TEAS 
OF    THE    SAME    OR    HIGHER    PRICE 

S.  S.  PIERCE  CO. 


Tremont  and  Beacon  Streets 

Copley  Square 

Cooiidgfe  Corner        .         ♦ 


BOSTON 

BOSTON 

BROOKLINE 


VETERAN   DRIVER   GLASS— Continued 


NAME   OF   DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


JOHN  COULAN 
PATRICK  DONAHUE 
JOHN  KINNEALLY 

PATRICK  J.  Mcdonough 

MICHAEL  CURRAN 
WILLIAM  E.  DENVIR 
FRANK  L.  LIBBY 
AUGUSTUS  FOPIANO 
GEO.  C.  LIENHARD 
PATRICK  A.  OUINN 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
S.  J.  RICHARDSON 
LOUIS  BRIAR 


City  of  Boston  (Sanitary  Dept.)       27 

C.F.Eddy  Co.  28 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co.  28 

Oak  Grove  Farm  28 

JohnT.  Scully  F.&T.  Co.  29 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co.  29 

P.  S.  Huckins  Co.  29 

Joshua  Harron  30 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co.  31 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co.  33 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  34 

City  Laundry  37 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  38 


The  Veteran  Drivers'  Prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years;  in  1905  by  Thomas  Haley, 
an  employee  of  the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Company,  with  a  record  of  40  years;  and  a 
medal  was  also  given  to  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation 
for  38  years.  In  1906  the  medal  was  won  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.  T.  & 
A.  G.  Van  Nostrand  Company,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years;  in  1907  by  John 
Francis  Kelley,  employed  by  R.  O.  Brigham  for  42  years;  in  1908  by  Thomas  Colbert, 
employed  by  Henry  Craft's  Sons,  and  by  James  Holland,  employed  by  P.  O'Riorden 
Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a  medal,  having  each  served  for  a  term  of  43  years.  A 
special  silver  medal  was  also  awarded  to  John  Green  for  his  service  of  49  years  with 
the  City  of  Boston.  In  1909  this  prize  was  won  by  John  M.  Lee,  of  the  Boston  Ice 
Company,  with  a  recoid  of  52  years  service.  In  1910  the  prize  went  to  Henry  Knox, 
who  had  driven  37  years  for  the  George  McQuesten  Lumber  Co. 


19 


Milk 

The  ideal  hot  weather 
diet  is  milk — it  is  cool, 
refreshing,  nutritious. 

Regular  deliveries  of 
our  milk  and  dairy 
products  are  made  at 
the  summer  resorts  of 
Nantasket,  Hull,  North 
Scituate,  Revere  and 
Winthrop. 

D.  Whiting 
&  Sons 


20 


CLASSES 


GLASS  1— FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 

In  this   class   Mrs.  Arthur   Gilbert    Merwin    offers  a  special  prize  of  $5.00,  the 
money  to  go  to  the  driver. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's   Name 

No.  of 
Horses 

1       City  of  Boston 

Arthur  W.  Helmund 

Jim   and 
Bill 

2 

2         "       "       " 

John  M.  Devine 

Frank  and 
Major 

2 

3         .       ..       .< 

John  J.  Ryan 

Tom,  Dick 
and  Harry 

3 

4     City  of  Chelsea 

*Elijah  E.  Smith 

Tom,  Ned 
and  Bige 

3 

CLASS  2— U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Five  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  Of 
Horses 


William  George 


William  George 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


21 


ENDORSED   "GOOD" 


Name  on  Every  Piece 


loWKEY'S  CHOCOLATES 

bear  the  name  on  the  back  of  every  bonbon.  That  name  is  a  guarantee  of 
delicious  flavor,  because  it  means  that  the  choicest  nuts,  fruits  and  flavors  are 
put  into  Lowney's  Chocolates.  That  is  why  they  are  the  most  popular 
superfine  chocolates  in  the  world,  and  why  they  have  the  confidence  of 
lovers  of  good  things  from  Newfoundland  to  Japan  and  from  Australia  to 
Alaska.     They  taste  good  and  are  good. 


JgW^EfS  RETAIL  STORE 

416  WASHINGTON  STREET 

Four  Doors  North  of  Summer  Street 


Come  in  and  see  for  yourself  whether  we  are  right  about  our  fountain 
drinks  and  ices  being  so  fine. 


22 


CLASS  3— CITIES  AND  TOWNS 
STREET,  WATER  AND  BRIDGE  DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

At  the  head  of  this  class  come  twenty-five  unnumbered  green  horses  belonging 
to  the  Street  and  Sanitary  Department  of  the  City  of  Boston,  not  in  competition. 
Entered  by  Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon,  City  Veterinary  Surgeon. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

. 

No.  of 
Horses 

6 

City  of  Boston  (Sanitary  Dept.) 

Michael  J.  Connolly                           1 

7 

"     "       " 

Thomas  Donovan                               1 

8 

u        .<           u 

John  McCool                                       1 

9 

«         u                ., 

John  Coulan,  Vet.  Driver                 1 

10 

"  "    " 

William  J.  Moran                               1 

11 

"     "       "         (High'y  Dept.) 

*William  F.  Gallagher                        1 

12 

"         " 

Thomas  Egan                                      1 

13 

u        ..           u 

Denis  O'Neil                                      2 

14 

..     .       . 

Daniel  Murphy                                  2 

15 

"     "  '    "         (Pav.  Dept.) 

Joseph  R.  Everett                              1 

16 

"     "       "         (Bridge  Dept.) 

John  J.  Green,  Vet.  Driver              1 

17 

"     "       " 

David  Leo                                          1 

18 

"     "       "       (Water  Dept.) 

*Thomas  McAuliffe                            1 

19 

"     "       "           "         " 

*Thomas  Arthur  Magee                      1 

20 

"     "       "           "         " 

*Michael  F.  Burke,  Vet.  Driver       2 

'^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


23 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 

Try 

Our  Laundry  Work 


COLLECTIONS  MADE 

In  Rosllndale,  Dorchester,  South  Boston,  Brookline, 
Nantasket,  Back  Bay  and  City 


TELEPHONE.  ROXBURY  283 


CITY  LAUNDRY  CO 

82  to  98  West  Lenox  Street 


CLASS  4     DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  ina>-  eiward  such  ribbons,  First,  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


21  Wilson  Tisdale  Co.  ( M.J.  Sh 

22 

23 

24 

25 

26 

27 

28 


ea)       M.J.  Shea 

*Timothy  J.  O'Connor,  Vet.  Driv 

*John  Daly 

*Cornelius  Curton 

*Albert  Williams 

*John  Ahern 

*Joseph  Frances 

*Andrew  J.  Dooly 


CLASS  5— MILK 

The  Judges   may  award  such  ribbons,  First.  Second,  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME                                                 DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

/ 

29 

Michael  Barr> 

Michael  Barry 

/1^^ 

^^30 

Erwin  L.  Cros 

s                                   H.  0.  Kennett 

.     31 

J.  H.  Forde 

Percy  I.  Hatch 

"■' 

32 

M.  Goldman 

*M.  Yosell 

33 

R.  J.  McAdoo 

H.  A.  McAdoo 

34 

C 

.  Brigham  C 

0.                                   Andrew  Diggdon 

35 

Geo.  Swiminer 

36 

*Howard  R.  Phillips 

37 

*C.  E.  Buttrick 

38 

*Phineas  Hubbard 

39 

W.  M.  Aldrich 

2 

40 

James  B.  Laffin 

2 

41 

Thos.  F.  Dignan 

2 

42 

'                                    Albert  T.  McLain 

2 

43 

Joshua  Clough 

2 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes 

Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals,  Brass  Shields,  Special  Prizes, 
etc.,  used  by  THE  BOSTON  WORK=HORSE  PARADE  ASSO= 
CIATION  for  the  last  six  years  were  made  by  the 

BOSTON     BADGE    CO. 


^  ^ 

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We  make  a  Specialty  of  Superior  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes,  Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals, 
Athletic  Medals,  Club  and  Class  Pins,  Banners,  Flags,  etc. 

WRITE    FOR    CATALOGUES     OR    ESTIMATES 

BOSTON     BADGE    CO. 


629  Old  South  Building 


294  Washington  St.,  Boston 


MILK— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


44 
45 
46 
47 
48 
49 
50 
51 
52 
53 
54 
55 
56 
57 
58 
59 
60 
61 
62 
63 
64 
65 
66 
67 
68 
69 
70 
71 
72 
73 
74 
75 


No.  of 
Horses 


Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 


Oak  Grove  Farm 


Weston  R.  Page 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Assn. 


J.  B.  Watt  &  Son 


J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 
D.  Whiting  &  Sons 


*Geo.  B.  Hamilton 

Thomas  Noonan 

William  Wilson 

Maurice  Hambro 
*C.  O.  Wilson 

Henry  McWhirk 
*Elmer  E.  Morse 

William  Campbell 

Ernest  Arkins 

Geo.  D.  Ferguson 

Alexander  McDonald 
*Alfred  Boutin 

A.  B.  Hatfield 

Wm.  A.  McKinnon 

Pat.  J.  McDonough,  Vet.  Driv. 

Herbert  C.  McAllister 
*Frank  J.  Horgan 

Lyman  A.  Pentz 

J.  C.  Martin 

J.  H.  Martin 

John  Carroll 
*Alexander  Matheson 

Joseph  A.  Watt 

Joseph  Barnes 
*Joseph  Hanson 
*H.  W.  Bakeman 
*W.  J.  Kennedy 

H.  F.  Knowles 

C.  Hedtler 
*W.  E.  Hayes 

C.  D.  Fletcher 
*Geo.  H.  Brown 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


27 


Monarch 
Light  Touch 


increases 
the    output 


Monarch 

Light  Touch 

The  features  of  the  modern  Monarch  include 
the  unique  Monarch  Light  Touch,  the  Monarch 
rigid  carriage,  the  Monarch  wide-pivotal  type-bar 
bearings,  the  Monarch  complete  visibility,  the 
Monarch  tabulator,  back-space  key,  and  two-color 
ribbon  shift. 

No  other  typewriter  combines  so  many  features 
of  practical  value.  The  modern  Monarch  means 
better  work  and  more  work  per  machine. 

Let  us  demonstrate  these  Monarch  advantages. 

THE  MONARCH  TYPEWRITER  COMPANY 


Executive 
Offices : 
300 

Broadway 
New  York 


THIS  ASSOCIATION  USES  THE 
MONARCH  TYPEWRITER 


28 


GLASS  6— BAKERS 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


76 
77 
78 
79 
80 
81 
82 
83 
84 
85 
86 
87 
88 
89 
90 
91 
92 
93 
94 
95 
96 
97 


W.  N.  Jenkins 
O.  B.  Gihnan 
Drake  Bros.  Co. 


J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Ferguson  Co. 


G.  Fox  Co. 


*R.  J.  Durkee 

Alexander  McKenzie 

S.  W.  Brian 
*A.  M.  Kellough 

A.  T.  Ridlon 

C.  Barieault 

James  Cronk 

Frank  Feehan 

J.  R.  Johnstone 

Louis  Sweetland 

Judson  Swinimer 

Robert  Wallace 

Phillip  Dev^enney 
*David  Smith 

Willis  Wheeler 

Harry  Johnson 

William  Hurley 

John  Roberts 
*N.  D.  Conrad 

*Robt.  K.  Paterson,  Vet.  Driver 
*John  Sullivan 

A.  Wyman 

P.  Wood 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


29 


Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

24  Exchange  Place,  Boston 


CLASS  7     LAUNDRY 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ril)lH)ns,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRlVE!t'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


99 
100 
101 
102 
103 
104 
105 
106 
107 
108 
109 
110 
111 
112 
113 
114 
114A 
114B 
114C 
115 
116 
117 
118 
119 
120 
121 
122 
123 


Allston  Laundry,  Inc. 


City  Laundry  Co. 


Eaton  Towel  Supply  Co. 
John  H.  Gingrass 
Gordon  Supply  Co. 


\^'illiam  G.  Kiniry 
Merchants  Towel  Supply  Co. 

New  England  Towel  Supply  Co. 
Trimount  Laundry  Co. 


LInion  Steam  Sponging  Works 


*Samuel  J.  Dickson 
Walter  Burdick 
George  Berry 
John  T.  Tehan 
Wm.  H.  McNeilly 
Norman  Sias 
Joseph  Irwin 

*W^m.  W.  Paterson 

*Henry  K.  Barnard 
T.  J.  Cronin 
M.  I.  Daniels 
James  P.  O'Brien 
Frank  H.  Ames 
Gro\'er  E.  Berry 
J.  C.  Duncan 
John  H.  Gingrass 
Frank  Baldwin 
Joseph  Connolly 
Elmer  Price 
William  G.  Kiniry 
Charles  Hastings 
James  H.  Wheeler 
John  E.  Murphy 

*John  Passalacque 
John  Smith 
John  Leahy 

*Arthur  O'Brien 
James  Crowley 


31 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


COMPLIMENTS    AND    BEST     WISHES 

OF 

HOUGHTON  &  DUTTON 
^  COMPANY^ 


...BUY... 

CHASE'S 

SUPERFINE    FAWN 
WOOL     SQUARE 

BLANKETS 

Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes — Look 
for  the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade-Mark — 
When  buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the 
word 


i< 


CHASE 


99 


TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  )7J0 

OAK 

GROVE 

FARM 

ALDEN  BROS.  CO. 
ji   j6   jt 

WHOLESALE     AND     RETAIL 

MILK  AND  CREAM 

1171     TREMONT     STREET 
BOSTON 


£2 


CLASS  8— DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

124 

Animal  Rescue  League 

Joseph  DeCosta 

2 

125 

S.  H.  Appleman 

John  Moynihan 

126 

Benson  Bros. 

Frederick  Ross 

127 

Walter  W.  Blanchard 

Walter  W.  Blanchard 

128 

M.  Cohen 

M.  Cohen 

129  J 

Com'w'lth  Hosp.  for  Animals 

Albert  Stromsse 

130 

W.  W.  Croft 

William  Davis 

131 

Eastern  Cigar  Co. 

M.  D.  Scheinkopf 

132 

E.  F.  Gerry  Co. 

Wm.  P.  Cook 

133 

The  Kelly  Peanut  Co. 

S.  Mercurio 

134 

* 

*Richard  Powell 

135 

A.  A.  Lemay 

A.  A.  Lemay 

136 

A.  Leuthy  &  Co. 

*John  C.  Sawbridge 

137 

R.  Marston  &  Co. 

John  R.  Chapman 

138 

" 

*Raymond  E.  Valiquet 

139 

,< 

Geo.  R.  Bennett 

140 

M.  E.  Moore 

M.  Meany 

141 

W.  C.  Sanders  &  Co. 

*  Walter  Mackie 

142 

B.  Williams 

Samuel  Williams 

143 

Smith  &  Cohen 

Harry  H.  Smith 

144 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

*John  R.  Smith 

145 

Geo.  H.  Wickes  &  Son 

Geo.  Pennington 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


SHATTOCK&  JONES 

ESTABLISHED    1850 

128  FANEUIL  HALL 
MARKET 


TELEPHONE.  RICHMOND  1436 


J.  C.  DRISCOLL 

TRUCKMAN 

AND 
FORWARDER 


46  FULTON  ST. 


BOSTON 


J.   C.    TALBOT 

FANCY    AND  STAPLE 

1157    WASHINGTON    ST. 
DORCHESTER 

Branch  Store : 

Associates  Building,  Milton 

Established  1815 


CLASS  9— DELIVERIES,  DEPARTMENT  STORES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserxed. 


No.  of     j      No.  of 
Ribbon     |       Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


146 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

John  H.  McKenzie 

147 

' " 

*Lewis  H.  Adams 

148 



James  H.  Padden 

149 

*\Vm.  E.  Denvir,  Vet.  Driver 

150 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

\Vm.  Ding^van 

151 

James  Jensen 

152 

" 

James  F.  McDonald 

153 

.. 

Paul  F.  Turner 

154 

*Louis  Briar,  Vet.  Driver 

155 

" 

*  James  A.  Reagan 

156 

" 

*\VilHam  T.  Lockney 

157 

u 

*James  Gegan 

158 

.. 

*Thomas  J.  Lonergan 

159 

Henry  Siegel  Co. 

*John  S.  Adams 

160 

"     " 

*John  Coyne 

161 

..     .. 

*Joseph  Creighton 

162 

"     " 

Joseph  Hennessey 

163 

u          .. 

Thomas  J.  Hill 

164 

..    .. 

*Arthur  Wright 

165 

R.  H.  White  Co. 

*Cornelius  J.  Moynihan 

166 

*Thomas  J.  Connolly 

167 

*Daniel  Gill 

168 

*Timothy  F.  Murphy 

169 

*Timothy  J.  Driscoll 

2 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Beer  That  Made   Milwaukee  Famous 

Jos.  Gahm  ^  Son 

GENERAL     N.     E.     AGENTS     OF     THE 

Jos.  Schlitz  Brewing  Co.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale  Dealers,  Importers  and  Bottlers 
of  High  Grade  Goods  Only 

340-350  C  STREET,  SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


Compliments  of 

A    FRIEND 


36 


CLASS  10     FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

The  Judges  may  eiward  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

170 

WilHam  Akin 

Harry  M.  Armstrong 

1 

171 

Frank  A.  Casertano 

Albert  Casertano 

1 

172 

Caldwell  Furniture  Co. 

Jerry  Lucy 

1 

173 

Jackson  Caldwell 

John  Hunt 

1 

174 

G.  S.  Densmore 

George  W.  Murray 

2 

175 

P.  J.  Donovan  &  Co. 

John  J.  Donovan 

1 

176 

"     " 

Henry  Donovan 

1 

177 

u     u                 <<                 u         « 

Francis  McFogue 

1 

178 

"   " 

G.  Broad 

1 

179 

James  M.  Douglas 

Alfred  Hanson 

1 

180 

John  A.  Dunn  Co. 

Elmer  Keith 

2 

181 

Alger  E.  Eaton 

Wm.  B.  Cotter 

2 

182 

S.  V.  Garland 

Walter  E.  Gallagher 

1 

183 

"     " 

Martin  C.  Tallent 

2 

184 

Hanover  Furniture  Co. 

Sam  Sheinsfeld 

1 

185 

S.  H.  Jacobson 

S.  H.  Jacobson 

1 

186 

George  Jaques 

Henry  Rose 

1 

187 

Henry  Levine 

Henry  Levine 

1 

188 

Thomas  McDowell 

*John  Bronkhorst 

1 

189 

Whitney  J.  Tingley 

Whitney  J.  Tingley 

1 

190 

" 

Jerry  DriscoU 

2 

191 

Paine  Furniture  Co. 

William  W^allace 

1 

192 

<(                ti           It 

Thos.  F.  McManus 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


37 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.   D.  CRESSY 


Q.B.HOWARD&CO. 

tieamsters 

jFoiwatbers 

Clinton    Market,    Boston,   Mass. 
COMPLIMENTS   OF 

J.  H.  Richardson 

Cosmopolitan    Boarding 
and  Baiting  Stable 

Corner  PITTS  and    SOUTH    MARGIN    STS. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 
Stock  Farm,  Andover,  Mass. 


COMPLIMENTS 


OF 


A  FRIEND 


HOTEL  AND  FAMILY  SUPPLIES  A  SPECIALTY 
TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 

STURTEVANT  &  HALEY 

BEEF  AND  SUPPLY 
COMPANY 


M.  FREDIANI  &  SONS 

WHOLESALE   DEALERS  IN 

Fine   Confectionery 


and  Salted  Nuts 

J|     «^     e^ 

326  Dudley  Street,  Roxbury 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

Teamster  and  Forwarding  Agent 

OFFICE: 

7    WATER   STREET.   BOSTON 


Tel.  Main  4184-2 


Room  306 


ESTABLISHED  1841 

W.  P.  STONE  &  COmPflNY 

Manufacturers  of 

WAGONS,  CARAVANS  and  SLEDS 

CARRIAGE  PAINTING 

REPAIRING   IN   ALL  BRANCHES 

175    and    179   WEST     FIRST    ST. 

SOUTH    BOSTON 


American    Coal 
Company 

376  Albany  Street 


BOSTON 


38 


CLASS  11— PROVISIONS 
LIGHT  HORSES 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

193 

John  F.  Barry 

*David  J.  Barry 

194 

Arthur  C.  Brady 

James  A.  Sproul 

195 

J.  D.  Brennan 

*Francis  Craven 

196 

F.  L.  Brust 

A.  F.  Brust 

197 

W.  A.  Clement 

Frank  C.  Sullivan 

198 

Cottage  Cash  Market 

A.  W.  Clark 

199 

A.  J.  Cunningham  &  Co. 

Wm.  McDonald 

200 

Joseph    C.  Dolan 

Paul  Rigali 

201 

" 

Wm.  S.  Brittain 

202 

James  Gallahue 

Norman  McKenzie 

203 

Graziano  &  Lombard! 

Peter  Graziano 

204 

W.  S.  Hayden 

R.  Leroy  Sanborn 

205 

"  " 

Chas.  B.  Scott 

206 

"   " 

Chas.  W.  Sanger 

207 

W.  H.  Lerned  &  Sons 

*Fred  S.  Douglass 

208 

L.  E.  Murphy  Estate 

*Fred  De  Corsey 

209 

Porter's  Market 

Horace  Knowles 

210 

Andrew  Ronald 

W.  H.  Ronald 

211 

Louis  H.  Resmek 

Nathan  Primac 

212 

Annie  J.  Rockwell 

Wm.  H.  Rockwell 

213 

Shattuck  &  Jones 

*John  W.  Bowker 

214 

"          "       " 

*James  A.  Doherty 

215 

Joseph  Simons 

Joseph  Simons 

216 

George  F.  Stodder 

Edward  B.  Miller 

217 

*Fred  R.  Blake 

218 

Tilley  &  Brown 

L  A.  Tilley 

219 

Toomey  &  Ornion 

Michael  Hoar 

220 

" 

*Frank  Hoar 

221 

G.  J.  Warren 

G.  J.  Warren 

222 

Julius  Weinstein 

William  Weinstein 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TELEPHONE,  RICHMOND  HOO 

United  Basket  Co. 

BASKETS 
STRAWBERRY  CRATES,  ETC. 

16  Fulton  Place     -     -     Boston 

Compliments 
of 

A  Fnend 

40 


CLASS  12— PROVISIONS 

HEAVY  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
/ed. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


223 
224 
225 
226 
227 
228 
229 
230 
231 
232 
233 
234 
235 
236 
237 
238 
239 
240 
241 
242 
243 
244 
245 
246 
247 
248 
249 
250 
2^1 
252 


Brighton  PubHc  Market 
Chapin  &  Adams  Co. 

Edgar  L.  Chase 
Geo.  W.  Clatur  Co. 
Walter  A.  Clement 
Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 


Walter  J.  Dolan 

Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

The  W.  M.  McDonald  Co. 
Pasquale  De  Napoli 


William  P.  Preble 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 

W.  G.  &  H.  C.  Russell 
Harry  D.  Smith 
Joseph  P.  Sweeney 
John  Wright 


Wm.  A.  Dorr 
*Benj.  H.  Waugh 
*Chas.  W.  Colley 
*Thos.  J.  McDonald 

John  R.  Foggin 

Albert  A.  Clement 

Neil  S.  Baker 

Harry  A.  Breen 

James  F.  O'Brien 

John  F.  Howard 

John  Diggins 
*Michael  F.  Doyle 

Fred  Carey 

Thos.  J.  McNiff 
*James  Welch 

P.  P.  Shaughnessy 

F.  P.  Shaw 
*Joseph  Lanzilla 

Michael  De  Napoli 

Angelo  Carbone 

Steven  Church 
*Oranzio  De  Napoli 
*Carmen  Vitale 
*Wm.  M.  White 

Daniel  Brennan 
*Patrick  Quinn,  Vet.  Driver 

Andrew  D.  Bowes 

Harry  D.  Smith 

Joseph  P.  Sweeney 

John  Wright 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


41 


Office  Telephone,  Haymarket  221  Stable  Telephone,  Somerville  2796  L  Residence  Telephone,  Someiville  1565 


C.    BOWEN 

"^"^^■^  "■'   SAFES    AND   MACHINERY 

AND  GENERAL  TRUCKMAN 

SAFES  AND  MACHINERY  STORED 

2  BOWKER  STREET,    Comer  Sudbury,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Office  Telephone,  Cambridge  257  Residence  Telephone,  Roxbury  841 

I.  FREEDMAN  &  CO. 

DEALERS  IN 

Masons^  and  Plasterers^  Supplies 

LIME,  CEMENT,  PLASTER,  SAND,  CENTER  PIECES 
HAIR,   FLUE   LINING,  LATHS,  BRICK,  DRAIN   PIPE 

51-53-55  First  Street East  Cambridge 

Sole  Agents  for  Farnam-  Cheshire,  Pitts  field  and  Vermont  Lime 


A.   J.   BARTLETT 

ESTABLISHED    1840 
Commission  Merchant  and  Dealer  in 

Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs  and  Poultry 

7  and  8  No.  Market  St.  and  7  Clinton  St. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

BEST  GRADES  A  SPECIALTY  Tel.  Connection 


JOHN    SCHWALM 


SUCCESSOR  TO 


DAVID  MYERS  &  CO. 

ILailor 


516  and  517  COLONIAL  BUILDING 


100    BOYLSTON    ST.,    BOSTON 


Telephone,  Oxford  1563-2 


THOMAS  McDowell 

upholsterer    and    Carpet    Layer 

CARPET    CLEANING 

459    West  Broadway,  near  Dorchester  St.,    SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  980 

42 


CLASS  13— CONFECTIONERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved . 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


253 
254 
255 

256 
257 
258 
259 
260 
261 
262 
263 
264 
265 
266 
267 


Joseph  Dimodica 
M.  A.  Halperin 
McDonald-Weber  Co. 

Runkle  Brothers,  Inc. 
The  Three  Millers  Co. 


Joseph  Dimodica 
M.  A.  Halperin 
*Geo.  A.  Harmon 
*Joseph  Pingree 
Joseph  Cobrain 
John  W.  Phipps 


New  England  Confectionery  Co.    ^Herbert  Oakes 

J.  P.  McCall 
W.  A.  Feyler 
*Warren  E.  Davis 
*W.  H.  Beltis 
*W.  T.  Seymour 
W.  H.  Collins 
*J.  H.  R  Miller 
*Bartley  M.  Roe 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


43 


The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


WHARF  AND  MAIN  OFFICE: 


496  First  Street,  South  Boston 


JOHN  A.  STETSON 
ROBERT  D.  HALL 


President  and  General  Manager 
Treasurer 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 

Hunt-Spiller 

MANUFACTURING 
CORPORATION 


C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

AND     WHOLESALE     DISTRIBUTORS 
AND     OWNERS     OF 

STATE 
HOUSE 
FLOUR 

REMEMBER 

WE  SELL  TO  ADVERTISE 
OTHERS  ADVERTISE  TO  SELL 


44 


CLASS  14~GR0CERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Hurses 

268 

American  Grocery  C(x 

Abraham  Cohen 

1 

269 

" 

Jacob  Paris 

2 

270 

" 

Samuel  M.  Smith 

3 

271 

J.  A.  Bowman 

*Geo.  E.  Farnum 

272 

Burke  &  Co. 

Albert  A.  Savage 

273 

Eldridge  Baker  Company 

William  Stewart 

2 

274 

Clark,  Cogan  »&  Johnson 

Wm.  F.  Murray 

275 

John  A.  Cronin 

James  McGrady 

276 

J.  Facktoroff 

William  E.  Glennon 

276A 

Charles  F.  Giles 

Bert  Fields 

277 

Chas.  F.  Giles 

Albert  Barton 

278 

Chas.  L.  Gilliatt 

Harold  L.  Frye 

279 

J.  T.  Glines  Co. 

*James  R.  Boyd 

280 

Habib  Brothers 

Geo.  Carmichael 

281 

Martin  L.  Hall  Co. 

Frank  B.  Dodge 

282 

H.  i\.  Johnson' Co. 

*John  F.  Murphy 

283 

Fred  Riley 

284 

M.  D.  Lewis 

G.  H.  Nystrom 

285 

Philip  Lynch 

Philip  Lynch 

286 

J.  E.  Moran  &  Co. 

Daniel  O'Leary 

287 

McNally  Brothers 

*Edward  F.  McNally 

288 

The  New  England  Grocery  Co. 

Jack  Forgione 

289 

Parker  Masters  Co. 

Vincent  J.  Kelley 

290 

Gerard  T.  Carty 

(Blind)  1 

291 

" 

George  R.  Davidson 

292 

" 

Ralph^E.  Romcan 

■Entitled  to    Driver's;   Badge 


TEL     RICH     2723-1 

Filippo  Bruno  &  Co. 

BOHLERS  and  LIQUORS 

at  Wholesale 

322-328  North  Street 
BOSTON 


ORIGINAL  DIXIE  BRAND 
PEANUT     BUTTER 

AND 

SALTED    PEANUTS 

Manufactured    by 

THE  KELLY  PEANUT  COMPANY 

200  State  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Compliments  of 

MAGEE'S 
EAST  BOSTON 
EXPRESS 

TEL.,  EAST  BOSTON  212 


W.  J.  HIGGINS 

Importers  and  Grocers 

128-134  EMERSON  ST. 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


P.  Di  Napoli 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 

62  FULTON  STREET 
Telephone,  Rich.  22155 


L.  B,  WflTERHDQSE 

CrucKman 

155  FEDERAL  STREET 
BOSTON         -        -         MASS. 

TEL.,  MAIN  3421-3 


J.  S.  Newcomb 


G.  M.  Legg 


J.  S.  NEWCOMB  &  CO. 


Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 


Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal  and  Poultry 

Basement,  4  Qaiocy  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 


Telephone,  Richmond  220 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

FELLS  ICE 
COMPANY 


46 


GROCERS— Continued 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

John  D.  Rose 

1 

Benj.  Terriccaino 

2 

*Peter  F.  Trainor 

1 

James  P.  Connelly 

1 

*Joe  Peirano 

1 

nVm.  H.  Carter 

1 

*Geo.  Brownell 

2 

*A.  B.  Leigh  ton 

3 

*Primo  Alberghim 

1 

*Joseph  Stiniola 

1 

Chester  B.  Fames 

1 

*Wm.  L.  Wholey 

1 

Frank  Leslie 

1 

A.  B.  Torrence 

2 

*Geo.  R.  Allen 

1 

Edward  Tewe 

1 

Jos.  McDonald 

1 

Walter  Lockhart 

2 

^Clarence  H.  Jones,  Vet.  Driver      2 

L.  Loughman 

2 

*John  Murphy 

2 

*Albert  Goodrich 

4 

Timothy  J.  DriscoU 

4 

Patrick  Donoghue 

6 

Daniel  Singleton 

6 

293 
294 
295 
296 
297 
298 
299 
300 
301 
302 
303 
304 
305 
306 
307 
308 
309 
310 
311 
312 
313 
314 
315 
316 
317 


Pastin  &  Co. 

P.  Pastene  &  Co.,  Inc. 

W.  S.  Quinby  Co. 

Ryan  Brothers 

Alfred  Scaramelli  &  Co. 

Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

V.  Tassinari  &  Co. 
P.  Terrile 

Timberlake  &  Small 


Geo.  W.  Wood 
S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


47 


BAY  STATE  FUEL  COMPANY 

A  Consolidation  of  the  Old  Firm  of  RICHARDSON  &  BACON  with  BAKER-HUNNEWELL  COMPANY 


'^m 


FUEL 


m^. 


fJMBRW^^V 


Coal™  Wood 


GENERAL  OFFICE  AND  WHARVES: 


157  Main  Street,        Cambridge 


Branch  Office  in  Boston:  \27  CAMBRIDGE  STREET 


BRANCH     OFFICES     IN     CAMBRIDGE 


624  Mass.  Ave.,     Central  St.        1326  Mass.  Ave.,     Harvard  Sq. 


J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Ferpson  Company 

THE       LE  A  Dl  NG 

BAKERS 

OF  NEW  ENGLAND 


853      ALBANY     STREET 


BOSTON 


MASS. 


R.  A.  Kennett 

TRUCKMAN 

and 
FORWARDER 


6     FULTON     STREET 
BOSTON 

Teloplioiie,    Riclimond    S30 


48 


GLASS  15— PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


318 
319 
320 
321 
322 
323 
324 
325 
326 
327 
328 
329 
330 
331 
332 
333 
334 
335 
336 
337 
338 
339 
340 
341 
342 
343 
344 
345 
346 
347 
348 
349 
350 
351 


Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 


E.  Boston  Gas  Co.  (E.  B.  Div.) 
Maiden  Electric  Co. 


Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Lt.  Co. 


Suburban  Gas  &    Electric  Co. 


Boston  &  Northern  St.  Ry.  Co. 
Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 


*John  J.  McCarthy 
*Thos.  J.  Greene 

John  F.  O'Brien 

Eugene  O'Brien 

Thomas  Kiley 

Patrick  McCarter 
*Elmer  V.  Newton 

Joseph  J.  Reardon 

Richard  Proverb 

Patrick  J.  Farrah 

Sherman  White 
*Daniel  E.  Foley 

Joseph  Mulligan 

Jeremiah  J.  Buckley 

Dennis  J.  Buckley 
*Cornelius  J.  Callahan 

Cornelius  Collins 

Jeremiah  Connors 

Daniel  J.  Foley 

Walter  C.  Chisholm 

Albert  R.  Nicholson 

Harry  Tomkinson 

Walter  Freeman 

Benjamin  A.  Murray 

Walter  A.  Flynn 
*Chester  H.  Meaddox 

Charles  S.  Moore,  Vet.  Driver 
*John  O'Connor 
*Daniel  Hayes 
*Dennis  McCarthy 
*Edward  J.  Delaney 

Thos.   Murray.   Vet.    Driver 
*Andrew  Blake 
*John  W^  Robinson 


'Entitled  to   Driver's  Badg^e 


49 


J.  W.  McENANY 

14  FULTON  STREET 
BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

THE 

TRIMOUNT 

LAUNDRY 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

UNION     GLASS 
COMPANY 


D.   S.    WOODBERRY 


S.  WOODBERRY  Established   1882 


E.  A.  HARRIS 


D.  S.  WOODBERRY  6  CO.        H.  A.  HOVEY  &  CO, 

247  Atlantic  Avenue,        Room  4I 


p.    O.    BOX    1284  TELEPHONE,    MAIN    4519 

BOSTON,   MASS. 


Dealers  in 


Butter,  Cbeese  and  Cms 


No.  32  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephore,  Richmond  930  BOSTON 


50 


CLASS  16— OIL  DEALERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
dcser\-ed. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


352 

Gulf  Refining  Co. 

Charles  A.  Hallett 

1 

353 

u 

Daniel  C.  Benner^ 

2 

354 

"     " 

Frank  P.  Kelley 

2 

355 

Standard  Oil  Co.  (Chelsea  Div.) 

Frederic  E.  Armstrong 

1 

356 



Alfred  J.  Goddard 

2 

357 

u         .. 

Charles  C.  Grover 

2 

358 

"     "     (E.  Bos.  Div.) 

*John  T.  Stewart 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Telephone  Connection 


Established  1899 


V.  TASSINARl   &   CO. 

Successors  to  J,  SCARONI    &    CO. 

IRestaurant 


Importers,  Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

Italian  ana  f  rcncb  Groceries 

Alacaroni,  Cheese  and  Olive  Oil,  Wines  and  Liquors 
Cigars,  Tobacco  and  Paper  Bags 


Nos.  98,  100  and  102  CROSS  STREET,  BOSTON 

Teleptione,  Richmond  1159  Between  Hanover  and  North  Sts. 


MAKING 
IT    A 
FINE 
ART 

4 


Have  you  ever  noticed  the 
ease,  facility  and  absence  of 
noise  and  confusion  on  a  Y., 
S.  &  H.  safe,  machinery  or 
office  furniture  moving  job  ? 
Compare  our  way  with  all 
others.  Then  you'll  put  your 
moving  problem  up  to 

"The  Do  It  Now  Teamsters" 


Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

571   Atlantic   Avenue  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephones,   Main  134-135-136 


Telephone,  South  Boston  112 

BOSTON  FLAG  POLE  CO. 

Dealers  in 

SPRUCE  AND   CEDAR  POLES 

SPARS,   TENT,  FLAG,  PIKE   and    BEAN 

POLES,  and  POLES  for  RUSTIC.FENCES 

Lignumvitae    Trucks,  Gilt    Balls  and   Halyards 


WEBSTER  CHARCOAL  CO. 

WHOLESALE    DEALERS  IN 

Best  Hardwood  Charcoal 

OFFICE: 

36  Webster  Avenue,  Cambridge,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Dorchester  796 

DORCHESTER 
ICE    COMPANY 


DORCHESTER 


169  Broadway  Extension,    So.  Boston 

. .;    Near  Dorchester  Avenue 


FULTON     O'BRION 

FLOUR,  GRAIN,  HAY 
FEED    AND    STRAW 

Nos.  3  and   4  UNION    SQUARE 
SOMERVILLE 

Elevator  and  Storehouse,  28  Lake  Street 
TELEPHONE,  J36=4 

F.  J.  IVIeCaPthy  &  Go. 
GROCERS  and  IMPORTERS 

FOREIGN  and  DOMESTIC  LIQUORS 

For  Family  and  Medicinal  Use 

Bottlers  of  Lager  Beer  and  all  kinds  of  Ales  and  Porters 

225  Havre  Street,  East  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  East  Boston  30 


GLASS  17— MANUFACTURERS 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No,  of 
Horses 


359 

360 

361 

362 

363 

364 

365 

366 

367 

368 

369 

370 

371 

372 

373 

374 

375 

376 

377 

378 

379 

380 

381 

382 

383 

384 

385 

386 

387 

388 

389 

390 

391 

392 

393 

394 

395 

396 

397 


Blake  &  Knowles  Stm.  Pmp.  VVks. 
Boston  Wagon  Co. 
The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 


Flash  Chemical  Co. 
Fellows  &  Son 

Globe  Paper  Co. 
F.  A.  Horle 
Hunt-Spiller  Mfg-  Corp. 

Geo.  James  Co. 
Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

National  Casket  Co. 

New  England  Bedding  Co. 
New  England  Maple  Syrup  Co. 
Max  Stone 
F.  W.  Toothaker 


Sylvester  Tower  Co. 
United  Basket  Co. 

Atwood  &  McManus 


Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 


William  Norton 
Samuel  Gale 
*  Patrick  J.  O'Brien 
Charles  Whyte 
*William  Kenney 
*Patrick  E.  Burke 
Chester  F.  Warner 

J.J.  Donovan 
Joseph  Silverman 

Wm.  J.  Winn 
*Richard  P.  O'Brien 
*Thomas  Melady 
*John  J.  Rooney 
^Bernard  J.  Fox 
*John  J.  Gilligan 

Alexander  Simoneau 

Geo.  E.  Bell 

Stephen  J.  Cashman 

Hiram  R.  Spinney 

Louis  Goldberg 

Geo.  Meehan 

Henry  Morris 

Albert  Murphy 
*Geo.  E.  Doyle 

Frank  Cuneo 

John  Cuneo 
*Edward  Riley 
*John  W.  Luzzatto 
*Thomas  Barrett 
*Joseph  Cronin 
*Wm.  H.  Bryson 
*01iver  H.  Marion 
*Edgar  N.  Bryson 

Lewis  King 

John  Foley 
*T.  J.  Harrington 
Patrick  Ryan 

William  Coughlin 

William  Benson 


•Entitled  to  Driver's   Badge 


53 


CoJiiplimerits  of 


1^  f^  1^  1^  f^  1^  1^  f^  1^  f^  f^ 
COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 

PUREOXIA 
Co. 


John  M.  Woods        W.  E.  Chamberlain        E.  D.  Walker 

John  M.  Woods  &  Co. 


WHOLESALE  RETAIL 

Hardwood 
Lumber 

AIR  DRIED  and  KILN  DRIED 
SPECIALTIES 

Mahogany    Whitewood    Qr.  Sycamore    Cherry 
Oak         Ash         Walnut 

223=239  Bridge  Street 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 
Telephone,  Cambridge    1430 


64 


GLASS  18— BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIALS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

398 

The  Atlantic  Works 

Edward  J.  Sweeney 

399 

E.  Dennett  &  Son 

*Charles  W.  Dennett 

400 

G.  S.  Densmore 

Robert  Quirk 

401 

Finberg  &  Rudnick 

William  J.  Hanna 

402 

I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

Michael  Dellano 

403 

"     " 

Justin  O'Brien 

2 

404 

"     " 

Patrick  O'Brien 

2 

405 

u        u 

*John  Silva 

2 

406 

Kiley  Hardware  Co. 

*Ernest  Stanton 

407 

Louis  Lucke 

Charles  H.  Lucke 

408 

F.  A.  Melanson 

Edward  Dugas 

409 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

Edward  M.  Clare 

410 

Milton  F.  Reynolds 

*Peter  P.  Timmoney 

411 

S.  Slotnik" 

Adam  Kootowsky 

2 

412 

H.  Wolpe 

*  I  sad  ore  L.  Wolpe 

1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


66 


(gnnoisseurs^  rfp^ 
^rink    iff^^ 


^ 


,^0   BV^ 


\\imm^ 


AND    ROA?T-D   B  > 

5HAPLEIGH  COFFEE  CO., 
BOSTON. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


W.  S.  QUINBY  CO, 

Coffee  anb  Cea  Jntporterg 


BOSTON 


CHICAGO 


Cocke  Coal  £o. 


MALDEN  and  MEDFORD 


Doherty  &  Daly 

Successors  to  John  Campbell 

BOTTLERS  OF 

Mineral  Waters^ 


SODA  FOUNTAINS 
A  SPECIALTY 


Tonics^  etc< 


40*42  Oneida  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 
Tel.   Tremont   J487=J 


Rs^    Safety  Barrel 

Pat.  March  28,  1893 

Buy  the  "SAFETY 
ASH  BARREL," 
made  of  very  heavy 
steel,  with  heavy 
single  ribbed 
guards,  if  you  want 
a  barrel  that  will 
outlast  any  other 
made.  Sold  by  all 
first  class  dealers. 
DOVER  STAMPING 
&  MFG.  COMPANY 


SEAVERNS 
PIANO 

ACTION 

COMPANY 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

MALDEN  COAL 
COMPANY 


"♦<= 


228  PLEASANT  STREET 

Telephone,  494  and  495 

Bain   Brothers   Co< 


Wholesale 
GROCERS 

240  MILK  STREET.  BOSTON 


56 


CLASS  19— METALS  AND  JUNK 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribl)()ns,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deser\ed. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


413 
414 
415 
416 
417 
418 
419 
420 
421 
422 
423 
424 
425 
426 
427 
428 


Alpert  &  Kaplan 
Thos.  V.  Doyle  &  Co. 

Adolph  Fisher 

H.  Frede 

Jacob  Greenleaf 

D.  F.  Healey 

Samuel  Jacobson 

Patrick  O'Brien 

Meyer  Rosenthal 

Da\id  H.  Sedersky 

Dover  Stamping  &  Mfg.  Co. 


H.  F.  Brackett&  Co. 


Joe  Bomstein 

George  Bonnie 

James  L.  Harrington 

Milton  Fisher 

H.  Frede 

Jacob  Greenleaf 

D.  F.  Healey 

Louis  Jacobson 

Patrick  O'Brien 

Meyer  Rosenthal 

David  H.  Sedersky 

Dennis  McGaffigan 

John  H.  Jones 

James  Farrell 
^Daniel  F.  Collins,  Vet.   Driver       2 
*J.  W.  Harris  3 


*Entitled  to   Driver's  Badge 


67 


East  Boston  Gas  Co. 

(CHELSEA    DIVISION) 

8  Everett  Avenue  Chelsea,   Mass, 

Headquarters  for  the  Latest 
Devices    in   Gas  Appliances 

-OF    ALL    KINDS=^== 


TELEPHONES : 
Office  .         .  Chelsea     71 

Office  .         .  Chelsea     J9 

Works         .        .  Chelsea  327 


OFFICE    HOURS: 
8  A.  M.    to    6  P.  M, 

SATURDAYS 
8   A.  M.    to    8  P.  M, 


GEO.  G.  FOX  CO 


BAKERS 


Ctiarlestown,  Mass. 


r 


% 


^ 


(& 


w> 


m 


Om'C^m 


Has  a  most 

delicious 

flavor. 

Is  pure 

and 
healthful. 
An  ideal 

food 
beverage. 

GENUINE  HA5TH1S  TRADE  MARK  ON  EVERY  PACKAGE 

Walter  Baker  &Co. ltd. 

.:         ^        ESTABLISHED  i780 

Si:...  D  O  RCH  EST  E  R ,  M  AS  5.'    , 


68 


CLASS  20— BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS 


The  Jud 

ges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 

deserved . 

No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

429 

Atlantic  Wine  &  BottHng  Co. 

Salvatore  Rizzo 

430 

"     "          " 

James  Romano 

431 

"            "     •'          "            " 

*Ciabriel  Romano 

432 

John  F.  Baldner 

John  F.  Baldner 

433 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

Martin  V.  Haines 

434 

"       "            "            *' 

Patrick  J.  Cronin 

435 

"        "           "            " 

Charles  A.  Walsh 

436 

Boston  Wine  &  Spirit  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Dooley 

437 

Filippo  Bruno  Co. 

Antonio  Sica 

438 

" 

Eugenio  Stiseo 

439 

" 

Salvatore  Bruno 

440 

" 

*Joe  Rocco 

441 

" 

*John  Moshillo 

442 

John  F.  Callahan  &  Co. 

Michael  F.  Codire 

443 

D.  Camelio  &  Co. 

Rocco  Bruscino 

444 

"          "     " 

Angelo  Graziano 

445 

"          "          "     " 

Joseph  Camelio 

446 

John  F.  Concannon 

♦Patrick  T.  O'Brien 

447 

P.  Dempsey  &  Co. 

Chas.  E.  Williams 

448 

"            "          "     " 

John  J.  Sheehan 

449 

"            "          "     " 

Timothy  O'Leary 

450 

Doherty  &  Daly 

*Michael  Daly 

451 

Joseph  Gahm  &  Son 

*Harry  A.  Melendy 

452 

"     " 

♦Frederick  I.  Thomas 

453 

-  "       "     " 

Geo.  A.  Forsythe 

454 

W'.  J.  Higgins  &  Co. 

*D.  F.  Lally 

455 

F.  J.  McCarthy  &  Co. 

*M.  H.  Burke 

456 

J.  E.  Moran  Co. 

♦William  Connelly 

457 

Thompson  &  Leavitt 

Herbert  Giroux 

458 

Herman  Wolf 

Gustave  Wolf 

459 

" 

*Chas.  W.  Wolf 

460 

Star  Brewing  Co. 

Thos.  Riley 

461 

" 

Thos.  McCarthy 

2 

462 

"    .        "          " 

Peter  Clasby 

2 

463 

"            " 

W.  Dineen 

2 

464 

" 

Thos.  Griffin 

2 

465 

"            "          " 

Jas.  O'Brien 

2 

466 

" 

Cornelius  Crowley 

2 

467 

"          " 

*John  A.  Morehouse 

2 

59 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


E.  J.  BABCOCK 

Coal  and  Charcoal 

47    SHERWOOD    STREET,    ROXBURY 

TELEPHONE,   ROXBURY    369 


ELDRIDGE 
BAKER  CO. 

WHOLESALE 

GROCERS 

213=215  State  St..         Boston 


Compliments  of 

The 
STAR 
Brewing 
Company 


CLASS  21— MULES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Mules 

468 

E.  Caldwell 

T.  J.  Curtis 

2 

469 

Peter  F.  Donnelly 

Edward  J.  Kenney 

2 

470 

Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

B.  F.  Thibideaux 

2 

471 

Oak  Grove  Farm 

Fred  Stoddard 

2 

GLASS  22— HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


472 

Harry  Gorodetzky 

Sam.  Goldman 

1 

473 

Fulton  O'Brion 

*Daniel  Smiddy 

1 

474 

" 

*Edward  J.  Murphy 

2 

475 

" 

*Phillip  Kelley 

2 

476 

W.  M.  Robinson 

*M.  E.  Connolly 

2 

477 

Shepard  tS:  Harding 

*Wm.  J.  Keene 

1 

478 

H.  Wise 

H.  Wise 

1 

*EntitIed  to  Driver's  Badge 


61 


COLEMAN   BROTHERS 


General   Contractors 


BOSTON 


Sole  P.r(ner    JOHN    F.    COLEMAN 


RED 


ACRE 


FARM 


(INCORPORATED) 

STOW,   MASS. 

Station,  South  Acton 

Hospital  and  Rest  for  Abused 
and  Injured  Horses 

Old  Favorites  Pensioned  for  Life.    Country  Rest 

for  City  Working  Horses.     Worn-out  and 

Aged    Horses    Rescued    from    Cheap 

Sales  Stables  and  Junk  Wagons. 

SUPPORTED  BY  CONTRIBUTIONS 

P.  O.  Box.  400  Stow 


GEO.   McdUESTEN    CO, 

Hard  Pine  and 
Oak  Lumber 

Oregon  Pine  and  Hackmatack  Knees 

27   KILBY    STREET 
BOSTON,   MASS. 


Docks,  Yards  and  Mill  at 
170  Border  Street,  East  Boston,  Mass. 


CLASS  23     LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


479 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

Louis  Blaine 

1 

480 

<. 

*William  H.  Sheehan 

1 

481 

" 

*Joseph  F.  Sylvester 

1 

482 

.. 

*Theodore  S.  Desmond 

2 

483 

" 

*Wm.  H.  Burke 

2 

484 

P. 

S.  Huckins  Co. 

Frank  Culbert 

1 

485 

' 

Robert  Hamilton 

1 

486 

' 

Charles  Sumner  Lake 

2 

487 

Oscar  Cushman 

2 

488 

' 

John  Culbert 

2 

489 

' 

*Frank  L.  Libby,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

490 

G 

2o.  McQuesten  Co. 

Andrew  J.  Rock 

1 

491 

' 

" 

Frank  Call 

1 

492 

' 

" 

William  J.  Riley 

1 

493 

' 

" 

John  Conroy,  Jr. 

2 

494 

' 

<■< 

Thomas  Timmons 

2 

495 

' 

" 

Michael  Walsh 

2 

496 

' 

" 

John  Bowers 

2 

497 

' 

" 

John  McBurnie 

2 

498 

' 

Henry  Keyes 

2 

499 

' 

" 

Henry  Rogers 

2 

500 

S. 

Rose 

Timothy  J.  Mansfield 

1 

501 

John  M.  Woods  «&  Co. 

*Nyron  R.  Merrifield,  Vet.  Driv. 

2 

502 

L; 

I  \v  re  nee  Wiggin 

Wilson  Pike 

2 

■Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


63 


C.   F.  HOVEY  Sc  CO. 

CALL    ATTENTION    TO    THEIR 

MILLINERY  AND  NEW  SHOE  DEPARTMENTS 

ALSO    THEIR    ENLARGED 

Rug,  Upholstery  and  Drapery  Department 

ALL    OF    WHICH    ARE    TO     BE     FOUND    IN    THE 

NEW    CHAUNCY    STREET    ANNEX 


The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

Wire  Cloths 
and  Screens 

Elevator    Cars    d^nd 
Enclosures 

FANCY  WROUGHT  IRON  AND 

BRASS  GRILL  WORK 

33  Pearl  Street,         BOSTON 

J,  E.  Jacobs,  Mgr.       Tel.,  Fort  Hill   1907 


Jijijtjtjiji  Jij*Jij*  jijtjijUJiJiJ* 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

A.    E.    BLISS 

General    Superintendent 

MALDEN   ELECTRIC  CO. 

MALDEN  AND  MELROSE 
GAS    LIGHT    CO. 


trtrtctrtrtr  ^rtctrtrtf'  9rar4r«r«r'«r 


CLASS  24— ICE 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,    as   they   deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

503 

The  Boston  Ice  Co. 

John  McLoughlin 

2 

504 

«     .. 

Willis  C.  Marks 

2 

505 

"         "           "     " 

Frederick  W.  Hale 

2 

506 

"         "           "     " 

William  McWhinney 

2 

507 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 

Thomas  Doran 

2 

508 

"     " 

Archie  Mclntire 

2 

509 

The  Fells  Ice  Company 

*Guilford  Saunders 

2 

510 

The  Union  Ice  Co. 

Charles  R.  Binns 

2 

511 

.<       ..       << 

Peter  Gouthier 

2 

512 

"       "       " 

John  A.  Burbine 

2 

513 

"       "       " 

James  B.  McWilliams 

2 

514 

..       ..       .< 

Joseph  J.  Melanson 

2 

515 

"       " 

Frank  P.  Turner 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

Hotel  Bellevue 


J.  H.  WATTS 

Truckman  and  Forwarder 

114  High  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone.  Main  1577-L 
Telephone,  Richmond  761 

P.  M.  LEAVITT  &  ©. 
ARBUCKLE  BROS. 

SUGAR 

99  Richmond  St.,  Boston,  Mass. 


Compliments  of 

P.  DEMPSEY  &  CO. 


JOHN  REARDON  &  SONS 
COMPANY 

Allston  and  Waverly  Streets 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 
Telephone,    Cambridge  1849 

J.  HARRON  W.  P.  KENNEY 

Sanitary  Boarding  Stables 

OPEN  YEAR  ROUND 

Stylish  Livery  Rigs,  Automobiles,  Hacks 

POTTER'S  GARAGE  AND  STABLE  CO. 

Automobile  Repairing  and  Supplies  ew  Specialty 

SHIRLEY  ST.,    WINTHROP 

Telephone,  Winthrop  210 
W.  F.  COBB  E.  W.  COBB 

W.  F.  COBB  6  SON 

485  Atlantic  Ave.,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Fort  Hill  2659 


CompHments  of 

W.  A.   Clement 

2139  WASHINGTON  ST. 

ROXBURY 


66 


CLASS  25— CONTRACTORS 

The  Judges  may  award  such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem   to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

516 

John  B.  Byrne  Co. 

George  Johnson 

1 

517 

Michael  J.  Dwyer 

John  F.  Dwyer 

2 

518 

John  T.  Conners 

Michael  Rock 

2 

519 

George  W.  Harvey  Company 

John  T.  Rogan 

1 

520 

Jeremiah  L.  McCarthy 

Frederick  L.   McCarthy 

2 

521 

"          "            " 

Thomas  J.  Scannel 

2 

522 

"            " 

Francis  E.  McCarthy 

2 

523 

Simon  Brothers 

John  Fernandez 

1 

524 

"              " 

James  Doherty 

1 

525 

"              " 

*John  Daley 

2 

526 

"              «♦ 

Dan  Daley 

2 

527 

"              " 

Joseph  A.   Simons 

2 

528 

Thomas  Quirk  Sons 

Patrick   Hanahan 

2 

529 

John   P.   Quirk 

2 

CLASS  26— COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  Judges   may  award   such   ribbons.  First,  Second  or  Third,   as   they  deem   to    be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


530 
531 
532 
533 
534 
535 
536 
537 
538 


Webster  Charcoal  Company 
E.  J.  Babcock 


N.  E.  Gas  Si  Coke  Company 


*Harry  Martell 

Timothy  F.   Vaughn 
*Joseph   A.   Leach 

Frank  McMahon 

John  F.   Dinan 

Frank  E.  Carlson 

Martin  Kelly 

D.   McCarthy 

H.   Drvsdale 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


67 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


LONDON  HARNESS  COMPANY 

JOHN   HANCOCK   BUILDING 
176  Devonshire  and  27  to  29  Federal  Streets 


GEORGE  ADAMS,  Manager 

Union   Steam    Sponging 
Works 

240   to    262    Dover    Street, 
BOSTON 

Cloth  Sponges  and  Refinishers 

London  Shrunk  Process 
Telephone,  Tremont  740 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

TIMBERLAKE  &  SMALL 

NEPONSET 


Importers  of  and 
Wholesale  Dealers  in 
WINES  and  LIQUORS 


Bottlers  of 
LAGER  BEER 
ALE  and  PORTER 


Bay    View   Bottling   Co. 

467  and  46g   E.    EIGHTH  STREET 


Proprietors : 

foZllmcHT    SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE,  South  Boston  5U-i 


ALLSTON 
LAUNDRY 

A.  G.  PRESCOTT,  Proprietor 

6,    8,    10    Braintree    Street 
ALLSTON.  MASS. 

ELM    FARM    MILK    CO. 

Distributors  of  Fine    Dairy  Products 
Pure   Family  and  Nursery   Milk.     The  "Ray" 
Inspected  Milk.     Certified  Milk.    Modified 
Milk.   Bulgarian  Sour  Milk.    Butter- 
milk.     Heavy,   Medium  and 
Light   Cream 

Office  and  Storehouse  at 

WALES  PLACE,  DORCHESTER 

Off  247  Columbia  Road 


P.  O.  Address 
GROVE  HALL  STATION,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


THOMAS  CAMPBELL 

Teamster 

HEAVY  TEAMING  A  SPECIALTY 

Dealer    in     Edgestone,   Paving 

Blocks,  Foundation    Stone 

and  Crushed  Stone  for 

Concrete    Work 

Stable,  79  Vine  Street,  East  Cambridge 


CLASS  27— GOAL 


The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,   as   they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


539 
540 
541 
542 
543 
544 
545 
546 
547 
548 
549 
550 
551 
552 
553 
554 
555 
556 
557 
558 
559 
560 
561 
562 
563 
564 
565 
566 
567 
568 


American  Coal  Co. 


Batchelder  Bros. 


John  A.  Bradford  Coal  Co. 


Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co 


C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 


Austin  Gove  &  Son,  Inc. 


*William  Anderson  1 

*Fred  Jackson  2 

*Otto  Anderson  2 

*Daniel  Shine  2 

Leon  Ivory  2 

*Geo.  W.  White  2 

*John  F.  Regan  3 

*John  L.  Thomas  3 

*John  J.  Arnold  1 

Daniel  J.  Finn  1 

James  Curley  2 

John    J.  Gatlcy  2 

*William  Fotherbee  3 

Arthur  Phillips 
*Harry  Broomfield 
Samuel  Clasky 
E.  Merritt 
James  Fox 
*Patrick  Donahoe,  Vet.  Driver 
Edward  Lyman 
William  Fitzsimmons 
Patrick  Helion 
Thomas  Burke 

James  Spikes,  Vet.  Driver  2 

Thomas  Rouse  2 

Patrick  Welch  2 

Bernard  K.  O'Brien  1 

Edward  F.  Gallinaugh  1 

Mathew  C.   Hughes  1 

Wm.  J.  Quinn  1 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


69 


NECCO  WAFERS 


THE     LARGEST    FIVE    CENT    WAFER 

ROLL    Made 
SOLD    EVERYWHERE 

MADE    BY 

NEW  ENGLAND  CONFECTIONERY  COMPANY 

BOSTON  -  -  -  MASS. 


Revere  House 

MERCHANTS  TOWEL 

Bowdoin   Square 

SUPPLY   COMPANY 

BOSTON 

212  SUMMER  ST.,          BOSTON 

R.  S.  HARRISON,  Proprietor 

Telephone,  Main  404S 

American    Grocery    Co, 

(INCORPORA  TED) 
HEADQUARTERS    FOR 

OLD  SOUTH  FLOUR 

AND 
AMERICO  BRAND  PRODUCTS 

97-103  Fulton  St.,  Cor.  Richmond  St. 
BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

C.  B.  ROSS 

TRUCKMAN 


1 6  Blackstone  Street, 


BOSTON 


70 


COAL— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


569 
570 

Harrison  Coal  Co. 
J.  F.  Kiley 

Morris  Greenberg 
*John  J.   McGowan 

571 
572 
573 

J.  A.  Marsh  Coal  Co. 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

*Allen   B.   McKim 
*George  W.   Dalton,  Jr. 
Paul  J.   Nobles 

574 

575 
576 

John  J.  Duggan 
*Thomas  E.  Grady 
*Thomas  Dalton 

577 
578 
579 
580 
581 

The     Rescue     Mission 
and   Coal  Yard 

Wood 

Wm.  M.  McKenna 
John  McGowan 
Jeremiah  Hurley 
*Christopher  F.  Willard 

William  Wilson 

2 
2 

2 

1 

582 

The    Rescue     Mission 
and   Coal   Yard 

Wood 

Frederick  Oberle 

1 

583 

584 
585 
586 
587 
588 

The    Rescue    Mission    Wood 

and    Coal    Yard 
The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Wellington-Wild  Coal  Co. 

Joseph  Sullivan 
*WilHam  Hearst 

John  Kinneally,   Vet.  Driver 
*Geo.  Hallet 
*James  L.   Mahoney 
*Richard  J.   Harris 

1 
1 
2 
1 
2 
2 

589 

" 

" 

Michael  Goodrich 

2 

CLASS  28— OWNERS'  AND  FOREMEN'S  RUNABOUTS 

The  Judges  may  award  a  Silver  Medal  as  First   Prize;  a  certificate  and  Three  Dollars 
as  Second  Prize — medal  and  money  to  be  the  property  of  the  drivers. 

First  and  Second  Prize  horses  to  receive  a  blue  and  a  red  ribbon  respectively. 
"Highly  Commended"  ribbons  may  be  awarded  to  the  remaining  horses. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


590  Thomas  Campbell 

591  Frank  F.  Capen 

592  I.  Freedman  Sc  Co. 

593  NewEngland  Confectionery  Co. 

594  John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 


Edward  Ho\  le 
Frank  F.  Capen 
*Louis  H.  Steinberg 
*Henry  La  Croix    " 
Thomas  W.  Kenney 


■Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


71 


Erastus  Dennett  &  Son 

MASONS  6  BUILDERS 


Steam  Boilers  Set  and  Repaired.    Drain  Laying.    Chimney 
Experts.     Concreting.     Machine  White- 
washing.    Plastering. 

TELEPHONES 

Office:     Haymarket  1899-1  Residence:     Melrose  214-1 

1899-2 

16  Chardon  St.     Boston,  Mass. 


APOSTOLU    BROS. 

GREEK  FRUITERERS 

Choice  Fruits  and  Vegetables 

Light  Groceries  and  Confectionery 

Fancy  Assorted  Baskets  of  Fruit  for 

Parties  or  Gifts  a  Specialty 

995  Boylston  St.  Boston,  M&ss. 

Telephone,  Back  Bay  3544 


W.  F.  McKinnon 
Truit  and  Produce  Dealer 

204  Vine  Street 
Everett        -        -         Mass. 


DENIS  O'LEARY 

Groceries,    Provisions   and 
Fancy  Fruits 

33  Cowperthwaite  Street 
Camhridgeport  -         -         Mass. 


BRASS   SIGNS 
FOR  WAGONS 


C.  H.  BUCK  &  COMPANY 
309  Washington  Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


Twenty-five  Years  Doing  One 
Thing,  and  Doing  it  Well 

"We  have  customers  today  who  started  with  us 
twenty-five  years  ago,  and  employees  who  have 
been  with  us  twenty  and  twenty-two  years.  There 
has  been  no  change  in  management  from  the 
start.  We  can  please  you  as  well  as  we  have 
pleased  others. 

BAY  STATE  CLEAN  TOWEL  COMPANY 

G.  L.  GOULDING,  Proprietor 

6a  Park  Square,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Oxford   424 


OFF 
CANTERBURY  ST. 


^  FLORISTS  ^ 

PERKINS  STREET  GREENHOUSES, 
ROSLINDALE  -  MASS. 

TELEPHONE     CONNECTION 

Wholesale  Growers  of  Palms,  Ferns,  Bedding  Plants 


72 


CLASS  29 -TRUCKMEN 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

595        / 

Wgusta  &   Gilman 

Herbert  H.  Gilman 

1 

596 

" 

Evert   Forbes 

1 

597 

" 

" 

Clarence  E.    Perham 

2 

598         Frank 

M.  Babcock 

Wm.    P.   Meehan 

1 

599 

" 

" 

Harry  B.   Morrill 

1 

600 

" 

" 

Michael  Cahill 

1 

601 

" 

" 

David  Walsh 

2 

602        I 

\  A. 

Barlow 

Joseph  O'Donnell 

1 

603 

'    '< 

" 

James  Phillips 

2 

604        J 

ames 

R.   Baxter 

Thomas  M.  King 

1 

605         Bh'nn, 

Morrill  &  Co. 

Henry  Marsh 

1 

606 

"      " 

Charles  Nelson 

2 

607 

"     " 

*F.  S.  Crouse 

2 

608 

"     " 

*N.  Lombard 

2 

609 

"     " 

*John   Holland 

2 

610 

"     " 

Fred   Beckwith 

2 

611        C 

I.   Bowen 

John   P.  Farrell 

612 

Harry  Roach 

613 

John  F.   Murphy 

614 

Frederick  J.   McGovern 

615 

Robert  Moran 

616 

Thos.  W.   Sheehan 

617 

Harry  Stien 

618 

Jer:m  ah   McCarthy 

2 

619 

Maurice  J.  Donnelly 

2 

620 

Robert  W.  Foster 

2 

621 

William  Veneran 

2 

622        V 

V.  C. 

Bray 

*Ira  J.   Sprague 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


73 


Best  Wishes  of 


A  FRIEND 


Austin   Gove   &  Son 

(  INCORPORATED) 
DEALERS  IN 

COAL,  WOOD  AND 
MASONS'  SUPPLIES 

Wharves  : 

212  Border  Street,  East  Boston 

TELEPHONE,   120 


G.  O.  Lanphear 


J.  H.  Elwell 


F.  L.  MOORE  CO. 

Truckmen  and  Forwarders 

246  Purchase  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone,   Main   7076 


J.  McGREEVEY 

TEAMING 

77  Smith  Street 
ROXBURY  -  -  MASS. 


John  Wright 

WHOLESALE 

PRODUCE  DEALER 

12  Alpine  St.     Somerville,  Mass. 


T4 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


623 

W.  C.  Bray 

Fred  A.  Byler 

2 

624 

"      " 

*W.  M.  Parrott 

2 

625 

J.  W.  Burkett 

J.  W.  Burkett 

1 

626 

u       u 

Chas.  M.  Driscoll 

1 

627 

E.  F.  Caldwell 

Stewart  Glover 

2 

628 

Thos.  Campbell 

Daniel  McCarthy 

2 

629 

" 

John  Lyons 

2 

630 

" 

Thos.  Campbell,  Jr. 

2 

631 

" 

Frank  Gay 

2 

632 

W.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

John  Bresenlan 

1 

633 

"       "     " 

Ernest  Miller 

2 

634 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

Joseph  Hanlon 

635 

u        «              u              u          .< 

Wm.  Salisbury 

636 

"  "     "     "    " 

Charles  A.  Coates 

637 

"    "      "      "    " 

Fred  Gullage 

638 

VVilliard  Simonds 

639 

"  "     "     "    " 

Wm.  H.  Paine 

640 

"   "      "      "    " 

Fred  Williams 

641 

C.  J.  &  J.  H.  Conners 

*Thos.  F.  Driscoll 

642 

Joseph  E.  Donnelly 

Ralph  M.  Thomes 

643 

u 

James  Carr 

644 

N.  R.  Dupont 

Frank  J.  Gough 

645 

John  C.  Driscoll 

*Wm.  H.  Driscoll 

646 

"      " 

*John  C.  Driscoll,''Jr. 

647 

"      " 

Walter  Morris 

648 

"      " 

*Geo.  F.  Young 

649 

Frank  Gnecco 

Frank  Gnecco 

650 

M.  Goldman 

M.  Goldman 

651 

Greenberg  &  Mandel 

Harris  Mandel 

'    652 

" 

*Louis  Greenberg 

653 

\V.  L.  Hallett 

*Thos.  L.  Roche 

654 

John  A.  Hanson 

John  A.  Hanson 

655 

u          << 

*Wm.  H.  Overy 

2 

656 

J.  Harney 

Fred  Harvey 

657 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

Michael  Condon 

*Entitled  to  Driver'' 

Badge 

75 


=  Roessle  Brewery 


PREMIUM  LAGER  BEER 

IN   WOOD  OR   BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER   FOUR   MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  Highest  Type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Quality,  Age,  Substance,  Purity  and 
Aroma,  and  is  Absolute  Perfection 

ESTABLISHED  1846 


OFFICE,   BREWERY  AND  BOTTLING  DEPARTMENT 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE,  BOSTON 


For  Over  42  Years 

WE    HAVE    BEEN    MAKERS    OF 

GOOD  HARNESS 

AND 

COLLARS 

304    Sets    of    our     Harness 
appeared  in  the  Last  Parade 

JAMES  FORGIE'S   SONS 

19  and  20  South  Market  St..  Alba.ny  St.  and 

Mass.  Avenue.  BOSTON  | 

76 


Complifnents 
of 

A  Friend 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


658 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

Peter  McDonald 

2 

659 

Joshua  Harron 

Patrick  Connolly      (Blind  Horse 

1 

660 

"              " 

Augustus  Fopiano,  Vet.  Driver 

661 

" 

Chas.  W.  Saunderson 

662 

T.  A.  Herlihy  &  Co. 

Robert  Herlihy 

663 

Louis  Jeselsohn 

*Jacob  Buxbaum 

664 

R.  A.  Kennett 

*R.  B.  Milliken 

665 

"  " 

*Henry  Harvey 

666 

"  "           " 

*Con.  McCarthy 

2 

667 

"   " 

*Eugene  0.  Stinson 

2 

668 

"  " 

Richard  Boats 

2 

669 

"  " 

Henry  Paul 

2 

670 

"  " 

Fred  Hitchcock 

2 

671 

"  " 

Edward  Ricker 

2 

672 

John  T.  Kilduff 

Robert  Strain 

673 

"     "       " 

John  T.  Kilduff 

674 

"     " 

John  Ackeley 

675 

A.  W.  Knight 

*Geo.  F.  James 

676 

J.  W.  McEnany 

Daniel  J.  Cullilane 

677 

"  " 

John  J.  Hartigan 

678 

"   " 

*Joseph  A.  McDonald 

2 

679 

u     a                   «. 

*Dennis  F.  Kennedy 

2 

680 

"     "                   " 

*B.  M.  Flaherty 

2 

681 

"     "                   *' 

Wm.  H.  Reardon 

2 

682 

Thomas  McEnany 

Patrick  H.  Farrell 

1 

683 

J.  McGreevey 

Frank  Moran 

2 

684 

"           " 

Ed  Noonan 

2 

685 

" 

Tom  Carney 

2 

686 

" 

Mitchell  Cunningham 

2 

687 

" 

John  Thomson 

2 

688 

" 

James  Norton 

2 

689 

Michael  Messina 

Joseph  Messina 

1 

690 

F.  L.  Moore  Co. 

Wm.  Devine 

1 

691 

"  " 

Frank  X.  Brown 

1 

692 

"  " 

*Gilbert  H.  McWilliams 

1 

693 



T.  B.  Murphy 

2 

694 

"  "          "       " 

Levi  A.  Wildes 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


77 


Snow,     Wheeler,     McElveen 
&  Cavanagh  Horse  Co. 

COMBINATION  SALE  STABLE 


Buyers  will  find  constantly  on  hand  a  large  assortment  of  every  class 
of  horse  at  lowest  prices. 

Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  and  Saturday  at  Combina- 
tion Sale  Stables  at  10  o'clock  A.  M. 

All  horses  warranted  as  represented  or  money  refunded. 

Accommodations  for  over  300  horses, 

243  and  245  Friend  St.,  Boston 


NEAR  NORTH  UNION  STATION 


Telephone,   Haymarket  505 


Telephone,  Haymarket  Nos.  491  and  492 

C.  BERRY   &   CO. 

Importers  and  Wholesale  Dealers  in 

WINES  and   LIQUORS 

Bottlers  of 

LAGER,  ALE  and   PORTER 

Proprietors      of      Berry's      Diamond 
Wedding  Rye  and  Bourbon  \A^hiskey 

84  to  88  Leverett  St.  and   2  to  8  Ashland  St. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


J.  T.  Tighe  Company 

BEST  GRADES 
FAMILY  AND    STEAM 


LOWEST  CASH   PRICES 

Wharf,  First  St.  foot  of  F  St.  IcniiTH  ROQTnM 
Yard,     331   West  Fourth  St.     f^^^^H  BOSTON 


Telephone,  South  Boston  156 


Compliments  of 

JOHN  W.WHITNEY 

Dealer  in 

BARRELS 

9  Chestnut  Street,  SOMERVILLE,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Somerville  1579-2 
Telephone,  Haymarket  1655  and  1656 

W.  Q.  &  H.  C.  RUSSELL 

Dealers  in 

PROVISIONS,    FRUIT,    VEGETABLES,    ETC. 
Butter,  Eggs  and  Game 

HIGH-GRADE    GOODS    A    SPECIALTY 
139  Portland  Street,  BOSTON 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 

No.  of 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

Horses 

695 

F.  L.  Moore  Co. 

John  F.  Messitt 

2 

696 

F.  A.  Mosman 

Harry  Everett 

1 

697 

"  " 

Wm.  Tracy 

2 

698 

Frank  Reavey 

Frank  Reavey 

699 

G.  W.  Reid 

James  J.  Doherty 

700 

"  " 

Arthur  Dunback 

701 

Thos.  Romano 

Thos.  Romano 

702 

C.  B.  Ross 

H.  Fletcher 

703 

"  " 

H.  J.  Kingsley 

2 

704 

"  " 

J.  E.  Butler 

2 

705 

"  " 

G.  F.  Daniels 

2 

706 

"  " 

J.  H.  Kane 

2 

707 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

Frank  H.  Strout 

1 

708 

J.  B.  Smith 

John  L.  Clarke 

1 

709 

"  "       " 

Frank  E.  Kimball 

1 

710 

"  " 

*David  P.  Ring 

1 

711 

"  "       " 

Percy  Treat 

1 

712 

"  "       " 

Elmer  F.  Moody 

2 

713 

"  " 

Albert  Walker 

2 

714 

F.  P.  Towle 

Edward  H.  Agnew 

2 

715 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

*E.  D'Stacio 

1 

This  driver  will  give  an  exhibition  of  driving  without  reins. 

716 

"    " 

*Patrick  Kane 

1 

717 

"    " 

*Fred  M.  Vance 

2 

718 

J.  H.  Watts 

J.  H.  Watts 

1 

719 

"  "       " 

A.  C.  Nilson 

1 

720 

"  " 

C.  R.  Watts 

1 

721 

R.  &  0.  Woodsome 

John  J.  Day 

1 

722 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

*Arthur  Estabrook 

1 

723 

' 

Thomas  Murphy 

1 

724 

' 

John  Redmond 

1 

725 

' 

*Tom  Redmond 

1 

726 

' 

James  Ryan 

1 

727 

' 

*John  Bernard 

2 

728 

' 

John  Bodoin 

2 

729 

Charles  Gilbert 

2 

730 

' 

Patrick  Welch 

2 

731 

"              "       "            " 

Walter  Rees 

14 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


79 


p.  S.  HUCKINS  COMPANY 


Yellow  Pine  Lumber  and  Timber 


40  CENTRAL  STREET,  BOSTON 


A.   SANSONE 

FRUIT  AT  WHOLESALE 

47  Pitts  Street 
BOSTON 

Free  Delivery  within  Five  Miles 

The  Boyd  Brockton 
Transportation     Co. 

INCORPORATED 


BOSTON  OFFICES; 


139  and  89  Broad  Street 
71    Kingston  Street 
54  Chatham  Street 


Member  of  Expressmen's  League 


G,  W,  &  F.  SMITH  IRON  COMPANY 

STRUCTURAL    STEEL 
AND    ARCHITECTURAL 

IRON     WORK 


Offices,  Sliops  and  Foundry 

Island,  Gerard,  Faraham  and  Reading  Streets 
BOSTON,  MASS.,  U.  S.  A. 


Compliments  of 

The    Union  Ice   Company 
BOSTON 


80 


CLASS  30— FOUR-HORSE  TEAMS 
LAWRENCE   GOLD  MEDAL 

(This  Class  is  restricted  to  teams  taken  care  of  by  the  driver.) 

The  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows:  First  Prize,  Lawrence  Gold  Medal, 
to  the  owner;  Silver  Medal  and  Five  Dollais  to  the  driver.  Second  Prize,  Silver  Medal 
to  the  owner;  Bronze  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Third  Prize,  Certificate 
to  the  owner  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver;  and  the  Judges  may  also  award  to  the 
remaining  entries  such  ribbons  as  are  deserved,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


732 

733 

734 

735 
736 
737 

738 

739 

740 

741 

741A 

742 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co.  *William  Erskins 

(This  team  driven  by  this  driver  six  years.) 

"  "       "     "  *WilHam  Lane 

"  "       "     "  *Michel  Devereaux,  Vet.  Driver 

(This  team  not  eligible  for  the  Gold  Medal  this  year,  as  it  won  the  medal  in  1909.) 


Cornelius  Bowen 
Thomas  Campbell 
L  Freedman  &  Co. 
R.  A.  Kennett 


Frank  Baven 
Edward  Duffy 
*Thos.  Folger 
*Levi  Clark 


(This  team  not  eligible  for  the  Gold  Medal  this  year,  as  it  won  the  medal  in  1910.) 
The  average  age  of  these  horses  is  16  years. 


P.  M.  Leavitt  &  Co. 

J.  W.  McEnany 

G.  W.  &  F.  Smith  Iron  Co. 

John  T.  Scully  F.  &  T.  Co. 


Sam  Wagner 

William  C.  Tompkins 
*Philip  H.  Boyd 

Henry  A.  Gilchrist 
*Michael  Curran,  Vet.  Driver 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


81 


u 


iC 


Telephone,  Brighton  147 


OF  EVERY  KIH©/ 
Implements.      ,^m^ 
^      Machines.  ^^^ 
Woodehware. 


TELEPnONE; 

RICnMONO  1660 


(INCORPORATED) 

SIANDA2    NORTH  riARKET  STREET.  BOSTON. 


JTuml^hos'  yipproved  JimpJoyGas. 


TEl^PHO.NE  BICH.  1660 


W.  J.  TINGLEY 

Ccdming  ana  jobbing 

25   George  Street 
ROXBURY 

D.   A.  SMITH    CO. 

truckmen 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 
45  ATLANTIC  AVE. 

Telephone,  Richmond  928 

A.  S.  SMITH,  Pres.  THOS.  L.  DUNBAR,  Treas. 

THOS.  COPELAND,  Supt.      W.  C.  SMITH,  Asst.  Supt. 

ESTABLISHED  1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Hammered  Iron  and  Steel  Forgings 

OFFICE    AND    WORKS    AT 

340  MAVERICK  STREET 
EAST  BOSTON,   MASS. 


J.  H.  SULLIVAN  COMPANY 
Contractors 


LAKE   ST.,     BRIGHTON 

Corner  Commonwealth  Avenue 


/M 


IRON  AND 

COAL 
CO. 


President,  GEO.  H.  BUCK        Treasurer,  DAVID  C.  BUCK 

Eastern  Storage   Co. 

EVERETT   AVE.   AND   MAPLE    ST. 

CHELSEA 


Storage  for  all  kinds  of  Merchandise  and 
Household  Goods. 

Connected  by  spur-track  with  B.  &  M.  R.  R. 

Shipments  made  direct  by  rail  or  by  our 
own  teams. 


82 


CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 


These  classes  are  open  only  lo  horses  that  have  taken  three  or  more  First  Prizes 


ars 
!eem  to 


The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  best  horsejf  or  piiir,  and   Five  Doll 
for  the  driver;  altd^ie  (^#f^  horses  will  receive  such  ribbonsjis  the  Judges  may  d 
be  deserved.  —    <^     t^     PU^    ^^>^riJ^.-«A^      CjLc%^^yU^, 

The  entries  are  to  be  judged  on  equal  term.s;  but  in  case  of  a  tie  the  entry  which 
has  recei\ed  the  greatest  number  of  First  Prizes  ^iH  1>^  entitled  to  the  Championship. 

CLASS  31— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,  LIGHT  HORSES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


743  Allston  Laundry,  Inc. 

744  Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

745  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

746  City  Laundry  Co. 

747  W.  J.  Higgins  &  Co. 

748  B.  F.  Keith 

749  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Lt.  Co. 

750  Marine  Office  Towel  Supply  Co. 

751  J.  S.  Newcomb  Co. 

752  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

753  Shattuck  «&  Jones 

754  P.  Shea 

755  R.  H.  White  Co. 


Elmer  E.  Wingate 
*John  B.  Fay,  Vet.  Driver 
*Robert  Dunbar 
*Solon  J.  Richardson,  Vet.  Driv. 
*Frank  J.  Higgins 
*Maurice  J.  Flynn 

Morgan  Brennan 
*Patrick  J.  Hennessey 

Daniel  F.  Madden 
*Joseph  Garland 
*Geo.  Fred  Seamon 
*Michacl  J.  Shea 

Clarence  Slawson 


*EntitIed  to  Driver's  Badge 


THIRTY-FOURTH   YEAR- 


Hdping:  Men  to  Help  Themselves 

BOSTON  INDUSTRIAL  HOME 

INCORPORATED 

Corner  Davis  Street  and  Harrison  Avenue 

and 

We  deliver  anywhere,  in  any  quantity,  at  Lowest  Prices 

lEver^  ©rber  HDeans  IRelief  to  the  [poor 


Telephone,  Tremont  658 


OLIVER  C.  ELLIOT,  Superintendent 


A.    A.    LEMAY 

PAINTER 

Telephone,  Cambridge   1266*4 


'WMSMV 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

THE  BOSTON 

WINE  AND  SPIRIT 

COMPANY 


DOCK  SQUARE 


BOSTON 


A  Free  Clinic  for  Aninials 

OF  THE  POOR 

IS    MAINTAINED    DAILY    FROM 
2  TO  3  O'CLOCK    BY    THE    NEW 

COMMONWEALTH    HOSPITAL 
FOR    ANIMALS 

24  Cummington    Street,   Back  Bay 
Telephone,  Back  Bay  2946 


Boston    Transfer    Co. 

Truckmen 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 

Telephone,  Richmond  3  BOSTON 


CLASS  32— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,    MIDDLEWEIGHT  OR  "  WAGON  "  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  by  weight,  and  partly  as  doing  their  work  at 


trot. 


The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


756 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

757 

Doherty  &  Daly 

758 

Drake  Bros.  Co. 

759 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

760 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

761 

Louis  Jeselsohn 

762 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

763 

J.  W.  McEnany 

764 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co 

765 

Oak  Grove  Farm 

766 

J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 

767 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

*Alexander  McLane 
*  Joseph  H.  Doherty 
L.  C.  Earle 
*Frederick  H.  Collins 
*James  J.  Welch 
*Henry  McKenzie 
*James  Heggarty 
*Charles  E.  Duffy 
*Wm.  F.  Campbell 
*Michael  G.  Murphy 
*R.  C.  Hezlett 
*H.  L.  Fallon 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


C.  BRIQHAM  CO. 

WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN 

/ilMlk.  Cream   nnb  Butter 

158   Massachusetts   Avenue 

CA/nBRIDGE,    MASS. 

TELEPHONES,    CAMBRIDGE  262  and  263 


WINDOW  SHADES 

MADE  TO  ORDER 

THE  HOYT  COmPflNY 

347   Broadway,  South   Boston 

443   Broadway,  South   Boston 

J  246  Dorchester  Avenue,  Dorchester 

ESTIMATES   FURNISHED 

TELEPHONE,    MAIN    1767 

A.  A.  ROWE  &  SON 

^-^orwarding  Agents 

CUSTOM    HOUSE    BROKERS 

32  INDIA  WHARF,  BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


IRescue  flibission 
Moob  anb  Coal  l^arb 

65    WEST    DEDHAM    STREET 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

J.  B.  SMITH 

teamster 

133  BLACKSTONE  ST..  BOSTON 

Telephone,    Richmond    736 


CLASS  33— CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES,  MIDDLE  WEIGHT^OR  WAGON  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horses,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


N:.of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


768 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

*Robert  E.  Coulter 

2 

769 

Geo.  G.  Fox  Co. 

*William  Vaughn 

2 

770 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

*Clayton  E.  Everton 

2 

CLASS  34— CHAMPIONSHIP 


SINGLES,  HEAVY  HORSES 


f^l 


The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of           No.  of 
Ribbon            Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

771 

772 

The  Atlantic  Works 
E.J.  Babcock] 

*Wm.'T.  Dunbar,  Vet.^^Driver  ^  ^1 
*John^N.\Watson;ii^i^l  !   -^ 

773 

A.IJ.  Barflett  j 

Charles^G.  Vaughn  ;      \^  •*  ;           il 

774 

Boston  Elevated^Ry. 

Co. 

*John  E.  Dempsey   ' [  -7^  7    4    "  '■  1 

775 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

*John  Anderson  :.  |7.|   IT         iTl 

776 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

*Barnet  Portnoi                                    1 

777 

James  Holland 

*Harry  Bateman                                  1 

778 

J.  W.  McEnany 

William  McNaught                           1 

779 

Fulton  O'Brion 

*C.  Jesson                                             1 

780 

Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

*Frank  Catarius                                    1 

781 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

*John  A.  Carr                                        1 

782 

Webber  &  Co. 

*Remus  Burt                                        1 

*EntitIed  to  Driver's  Badge 


87 


Convincing  Reasons  Why  You  Should 
Do  Your  Shopping  in  this  Great  Store 

/;/  addition  to  being  Boston'' s  best  store  for  new  and  novel  articles,  this  house  is 
undeniably  the  best  store  for  staple  goods  of  all  kinds.  Through  our  perfected  system  of 
merchandising,  you  will  find  here  every  week  in  the  year  plentiful  assortments  of  every 
kind  of  merchandise  we  carry. 

OUR  PRICES  ARE  ABSOLUTELY  THE  LOWEST.  We  arc  never  undersold. 
We  guarantee  the  price  of  everything  we  sell  to  be  as  low  as,  or  lower  than,  the  same 
article  can  be  bought  elsewhere  in  New  England. 


OUR  GUARANTEE:  Every  article  bought  here  —  no  matter 
how  low  the  price  may  be  —  carries  our  guarantee  of  satisfaction  to  the 
purchaser. 


Jordan,  Marsh  Company 


Telephone 

M.  J.  SHEA  - 


South   Boston  40 1 
M&nager 


Wilson  Tisdale  Company 

OLD  COLONY 

STABLE 


Working   Horses   and  Wagons 
To   Let  by   the  Day   or  Week 

46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH   BOSTON 


Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

MILK 
CREAM 

AND 

BUTTER 


FARMS  AT 
Southborough,  Mass. 


BOSTON  OFFICE 
9  Bosworth  Street 


CLASS  35— CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horses,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


783  At  wood  &  McManus 

784  Bain  Bros.  Co. 

785  Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

786  Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

787  R.  A.  Kennett 

788  J.  W.  McEnany 

789  Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

790  Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

791  Standard  Oil  Co.  (Camb.  Div.) 

792  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

793  L.  A.  Waterhouse 

794  F.  L.  Moore  Co. 


*William  Argy  2 

John  F.  Callahan  2 

*James  Gorman,  Vet.  Driver  2 

*Michael  J.  Anglin  2 

*Elwood  Demerritt  2 

*Francis  M.  Sullivan  2 

Patrick  White  2 

*John  J.  Griffin  2 

*Melville  Dickie,  Vet.  Driver  2 

*Michael  O'Neil  2 

*Wm.  F.  Meese,  Vet.  Driver  2 

*James  Donnelly  3 


■Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


New     England's     Largest,     Best 
Lighted  and  Best  Ventilated 

RETAIL   STORE 


A    PLEASANT    PLACE    TO    SHOP 


HENRY   SIEQEL   CO. 


Blinn.  Morrill 
&  Company 

truckmen 


0^ 


6  CHATHAM  ROW 


AND 


113  FRANKLIN  STREET 
BOSTON 


T.  J.    PRIEST 


Boarding,   Baiting 
Livery  and  Sale  Stable 


FIRST  CLASS    HORSE  SHOEING 
also  CLIPPING  BY  ELECTRICITY 


68  to  74  Northampton  St. 


Telephone,  Roxbury  325 


90 


CLASS  36— OLD  HORSES 


DIVISION  A 


First  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 

Second  Prize:  Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Fourth,  Fifth  and  Sixth  Prizes:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons, 


with 

prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 

No.  of 
Ribbon 



No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

795 

C.  R.  King 

Howard  L.  Chisholm 

Victor 

14 

10 

796 

Chapin,  Adams  Co. 

nVm.  S.  Wilson 

Billy 

14 

10 

797 

W.  F.  Cobb  &  Son 

Michael  W^alsh 

Tommy 

15 

10 

798 

Union  Ice  Co. 

John  H.  Wright 

Nancy 
Dolly 

14 
14 

10 
10 

799 

a              a        ii 

Oscar  0.  Bent 

Tom 
Jerry 

15 
15 

10 
10 

800 

A.  F.  Carpenter 

Chas.  White, 

Vet.  Driver 

Rich.   II 

16 

10 

801 

East  Boston  Gas  Co. 

(East  Boston  Div.) 

Geo.  Garland 

Teddy 

19 

10 

802 

Edward  A.  Hannaford 

*Harry  S.  Johnson 

Chub 

16 

11 

803 

Earl's  Forwarding  Co. 

Forest  E.  Pouler 

Royal 

16 

11 

804 

~ 

James  H.  Sullivan 

Jerry 

16 

11 

805 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

*William  B.  Smith, 

Vet.  Driver 

Tom 
Jerry 

16 
16 

11 
11 

806 

Maiden  Coal  Co. 

*Walter  J.  Harrington 

Baby 

16 

11 

807 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

Chas.  Mclnness 

Tom 

17 

11 

808 

M.  J.  Gallagher 

*James  J.  Willock 

Mike 

17 

11 

809 

Brighton  Public  Market 

Andrew  A.  Cunniff 

Kitty 

16 

12 

810 

Blinn,  Morrill  &:  Co. 

Daniel  Mecham 

Mike 

17 

12 

811 

L.  Hirshberg 

David  L.  Hirshberg 

Tommy 

17 

12 

91 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


ATWOOD  tf  McMANUS 


Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of 


Wooden  Boxes 

Packing  Cases  and 

Kindling  Wood 


TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


Factory  and  Office 

CARTER  and  FOURTH  STREETS,  CHELSEA,  MASSACHUSETTS 


Compliments    of 

THE 

Compliments  of 

John  A.  Bradford 
Coal   Company 

ATLANTIC 
WORKS 

J.  A.  MARSH 
COAL   CO. 

38-40  Park  Street 
SOMERVILLE 

Telephone,  Somcrville  319 

92 


CLASS  36-^OLD  HORSES 


DIVISION  B 


F'irst  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 
Second  Prize:  Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  E.  K.  Forgan. 
Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 
Fourth  and  Fifth  Prizes:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  One  Dollar  each  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved 


No.  of  No.  of 
Ribbon   Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

812 

City  of  Boston  (San.  Div.) 

Samuel  Blair 

Sam 

(Not  In  competition) 

18 

12 

813 

Trimount  Laundry 

L.  A.  Fiske 

Buck 

18 

12 

814 

F.  L.  Moore  Co. 

*Patrick  J.  Finn 

Florence 

(Nut  in  competition) 

Donald 

18 

12 

815 

Geo.  McQuesten  Co. 

Michael  Driscoll 

Pig 
Jerry 

18 
18 

12 
12 

816 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

*John  F.  Shea 

Jim 

19 

12 

817 

Guptill  Brothers 

Wm.  L.  Gulley 

Nellie 

19 

12 

818 

Charles  Dailey 

Frank  McDonald 

Warren 

20 

12 

819 

Union  Glass  Co. 

*John  J.  Brady 

Dan 

18 

13 

820 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

*David  Aiton 

Babe 

Johnson 

21 

13 

821 

W.  M.  Robinson 

J.J.  McDermott 

Bob 

19 

14 

822 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

*John  F.  Connors, 

Vet.  Driver 

Frank 

19 

14 

823 

Jeremiah  L.  McCarthy 

Timothy  J.  Scannell 

Bob 

20 

14 

824 

Jeremiah  L.  McCarthy 

Wm.  J.  McCarthy 

Major 

21 

14 

825 

Porter's  Market 

Harold  Allison 

Prince 

21 

14 

826 

P.  S.  Huckins  Co. 

Lewis  B.  Libby, 

Lion 
Tiger 

22 
23 

14 
14 

Vet.  Driver 

*Entitle(l  to  Driver's  Badge 


93 


Compliments 


of 


A    Friend 


ESTABLISHED     1841 

E.    B.    BADGER 
&   SONS   CO. 

«  «  « 

Coppersmiths  and 
Sheet  metal  Olorkers 

« « « 

Nos.63  to  75  PITTS  STREET 
BOSTON 


If  you  anticipate  moving  to  REVERE 
or  WINTHROP,  do  not  forget  the 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

which  supplies  electricity  for  light  and 

power  and  gas  for  lighting,  heating 

and  cooking 

'^      ^      '^ 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

Revere  and   Winthrop 


94 


CLASS  36— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  C 

First  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  ofiered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 
Second  Prize:  Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 
Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fourth  Pri-Te:  Tv/o  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars   offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

827 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

*Geo.  C.  Cobham 

Babe 

19 

15 

828 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

*John  E.  Marcou 

Billy 

19 

15 

829 

H.  F.  Brackett 

Billy  W.  Webb 

Billy 

20 

15 

830 

Joshua  Harron 

Patrick  F.  Brennan 

Peter 

20 

15 

831 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

*John  J.  Magner 

Rose 

20 

15 

832 

M.  Frediani 

John  J.  Frediani 

Harry 

21 

15 

833 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

nVilliam  B.  Loud 

Jumbo 

21 

15 

834 

Elmer  F.  Butler 

Wm.  R.  Fitzgerald 

Babe 

21 

15 

835 
836 

H.  E.  Chase 

Carter,  Russell  &  Co. 

Moses  P.  Durand 
Geo.  L.  Callahan 

Blind 

Aggie 
Prince 

22 
22 

15 
15 

837 

W.  H.  Lerned  &  Sons 

Chas.  B.  Olmstead 

Fannie 

25 

15 

838 

John  A.  Hedin 

*Wm.  A.  Simpson 

Patsy 

20 

16 

839 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Ralph  B.  Fames 

Jack 

25 

16 

840 

J.  H.  Hathaway  Co. 

Edwin  R.  Dillingham 

Nigger 
Dynamite 

22 

21 

16 
10 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


J.  T.  COILEY 


DKALKU  IN 


Fruit  and  Produce 

FRESH  IN  SEASON 

"XT^Tg    Tx'y    to    I*l©aso 

Residence,  220  Webster  Avenue 
CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

John  T  Connors 

CONTRACTOR 

2078  Washington  Street 
ROXBURY,    MASS. 


C.  F.  Eddy  Company 
COAL  DEALERS 

West    Newton,     Mass. 

Animal   Rescue 

League   Annex 

AT  PINE  RIDGE,  DEDHAM 

Poor  Men's  Horses  Taken  Free 
For  Rest  and  Treatment 

APPLY     AT 

51     CARVER    STREET 


RED  ACRE  FARM 

AT    STOW,    MASS. 

p.  O.  Address,  So.  Acton.  Tel.,  W.  Acton  8 

Home  and   Hospital 
For  Horses 

Free  board  and  treatment  in  deserving  cases.  The  Boston 
Work-Horse  Parade  Association  acts  as  Boston  agent  for  Red 
Acre  Farm.     Apply  at  our  office,  15  Beacon  St.,  Room  27. 


Ort 


CLASS  36— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  D 

First  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  Dwight. 
Second  Prize:  Four   Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Third  Prize:  Three   Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fourth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,   the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  C\3mmcnded  "   ribboi 
with  prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No    of  N^.of 
Ribbon    Entry 

•    1 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horses 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

841 

C.  W.  Walker  Co. 

*Jas.  F.  Walker, 

Vet.  Driver 

Prince 

2i- 

16 

842 

Geo.  H.  Matthis 

♦Alexander  Doherty 

Maggie 

24 

16 

843 

Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 

M.  J.  Shuckrowe 

Kate 

22 

17 

844 

Charles  H.  W>lls 

Chas.  H.  Wells 

Buck 

23 

17 

845 

John  A.  Bradford  Coal  Co. 

Martin  J.  Kennedy 

Billy 

24 

17 

846 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Cornelius  Ahern 

Billy 

24 

17 

847 
848 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 
Geo.  T.  McLaughlin 

Wm.  C.  Jenkins 
Frank  J.  Watson 

Lord 

Tennyson 

Bessie 

20 
22 

18 
18 

849 

Jacob  Bierweiler  &  Son 

*John  Brown 

Kate 

23 

18 

850 

H.  W.  Eldridge 

*C.  H.  Eldridge 

Dick 

25 

21 

851 

W.  C.  Bray 

*Nathan  P.  Teague 

Peggy 

26 

21 

852 

C.  Bowen 

Hans  Christensen 

Tom 

27 

20 

853 

Otto  E.  Zaugg 

*Henry  Sheehan 

Ginger 

27 

11 

854 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

*Robert  F.  Atwood 

White 
John 

27 

22 

* 

Entitled  to  Drive 

rS  Bad 

ge 

97 


CLASS  36— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  E 

First  Prize:  Gold  Medal,  offered  In*  the  Mass.  SocietA-  for  the  Pre\'ention  f)f 
Cruelty  to  Animals. 

Second  Prize:  Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Fred  L.  Jordan. 

Third  Prize:  Four  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fourth  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's 
Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

855 

856 

Red  Acre  Farm 

Retired  from  the 

City  of  Boston 

William  Hendy 

Boston  Police  Dept.  in  I91u 

Michael  Jesso 

Prince 

(Not  in  competition! 

Old  Joe 

iNot  in  competition) 

33 
37 

24 

857 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

nVm.  p.  Burke 

Tom 
Harry 

(Not  In  competition) 

Major 

30 
24 

9 
9 

858 

C.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

*Geo.  C.  Lienhard, 
Vet.  Driver 

28 

18 

859 

Michael  J.  Shea 

Frank  H.  Buckley 

Doctor 

29 

24 

860 

John  A.  Hanson 

John  A.  Hanson 

Curtis 

30 

10 

861 

Suburban  Gas  &  Elec.  Co. 

*Jas.  Mann 

Dotsy 

30 

17 

862 

Walter  P.  Jones 

*Geo.  H.  Wascott 

Paddy 

30 

20 

863 

Mrs.  Daniel  Cronin 

John  A.  Cronin 

Jack 

30 

26 

864 

John  L.  Dufifley 

*Richard  P.  Dufifley 

Dick 

31 

13 

865 

Barry  Bldg.  &  Wreck.  Co. 

*Jas.  Shealey 

Jack 

31 

15 

866 

Magee  Express  Co. 

*Henry  Harvender 

Bill 

31 

15 

867 

The  Hoyt  Co. 

*Geo.  B.  Hatch 

Ben 

31 

17 

868 

J.  B.  Smith 

James  Avery 

Sandy 

32 

27 

869 

Frank  P.  Dyer 

Frank  P.  Dyer 

John 

37 

11 

CLASS  37— CHAMPION  OLD  HORSES 

In  this  (lass,  Mr.  George  W.  Harrington  offers  a  First  Prize  of  Ten  Dollars; 
Mr.  W'm.  D.  Quimby  offers  a  Second  Prize  of  Five  Dollars,  and  the  Association  a  Third 
Prize  of  Three  Dollars. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

870 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Charlie  Brown 

Billie 

28       21 

871 

Alonzo  E.  Winn 

Alonzo  E.  Winn 

Chub 

29  :   23 

872 

James  F.  Weir 

*Frederick  E.  Weir 

Ned 

37  1   26 

*I 

Entitled  to   Driver 

s  Bad 

S^ 

CLASS  38— RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

This  Class  is  for  horses  once  broken  down,  by  over-work  or  neglect,  and  restored 
to  health  and  strength  by  the  present  owner. 

The   Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  and  the  following  special  prizes: — 

First  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  a  "  Friend  to  Animals." 
Second  Prize:  Bronze  Medal  and  Three  Dollars. 
Third   Prize:  Three  Dollars. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


Horse's  Name 


Horse's 
Age 


873 


874 


James  P.  Carlan  James  P.  Carlan  Kit  23 

"All  sores  when  bought,  and  weighed  but  850  pounds;  now  weighs  1075.      Was  bought 
for  $25.00;    $150.00  was  recently  offered  for  her." 

Havelock  Churchill  *Thos.  J.  P.  Timmony        Dick  17 

"This  horse  was  bought  for  $14.00,  had  been  over-driven  and  abused;  was  restored   after 
three  months'  rest  and  care,  and  is  today  considered  by  the  owner  as  worth  over  $100.00." 


;75 


876 


Geo.  H.  Carter  Geo.  H.  Carter 

"This  mare  was  bought  two  years  ago  for  $7.50." 


Mabel  G.     13 


Howard  Brothers 


"John  Howard, 

Vet.  Driver 


Buffalo 


13 


87i 


'This  horse  was  bought  four  years  ago  in  an  emaciated  condition;  restored  to  health  by  the 

care  of  the  driver.     When  bought  he  weighed  1240  pounds;  now  weighs 

1560,  and  the  owners  consider  him  worth  $400.00." 

John  J.  Kcnn>-  William  Duffy  Dolly 

"This  mare  was  bought  two  years  ago  for  $80.00;  was  thin,  cut  and  emaciated; 
now  in  splendid  condition." 

John  J.  Kenny  John  J.  Kenny  Frank 

"This  horse  was  bought  a  year  ago  for  $125.00,  thin  and  worn  from  har<i  usage. 
Owner  considers  him  worth  $275.00  today." 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  39— BARREL  RACKS 

The  Jud.ux's  nia>-  award  such  rihhons,  First.  Second  or  Third,  as  iliey  deem  lo  he 
deserved. 

In  addition,  Mr.  J.  W".  Whilney  offers  a  Street  Blanket  for  the  best  horse,  aj^e 
considered, — his  own  horses  not  to  com])ete. 

James  Forgie's  Sons  and  the  London  Harness  Company  also  offer  street  blarkcts 
for  the  second  and  third  best  horses,  age  considered. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


879 
880 
881 
882 
883 
884 
885 
886 
887 
888 
889 
890 
891 
892 


Timoth>-  J.  lionne 
Geo.  R.  Busby 

W'm.  Corbett 
Peter  F.  Donnelly 
McCullough  &  Murph\- 

Ralph  Neas 
Daniel  F.  Sheehan 
William  J.  Welch 
John  W.  Whitney 


Fimoth}-  J.  Bonne 
^John  J.  Oliver 
J.  Carney 
Samuel  S.  Corbett 
Peter  F.  Donnelly 
Thos.  F.  McCullough 
Frank  P.  Toole 
Ralph  Neas 
Daniel  F.  Sheehan 
William  J.  Welch 
Charles  Chapman 
William  J.  Chapman 
Daniel  M.  O'Connell 
Geo.  H.  Younker 


CLASS  40— HUCKSTERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  twelve  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


893 
894 
895 
896 
897 
898 
899 
900 
901 


George  Bougopoulos 

Bournazos  Brothers 

N.  Bournazos-Kanell  Co. 

Harry  Berensen 

J.  Burns 

William  G.  Burrows 

Edward  A.  Campbell 


*N.  C.  Bougopoulos 
*Steve  S.  Staurapoulos 
James  Kanell 
N.  Bournazos 
Harry  Berenson 
Thomas  S.  Hazel  ton 
*  William  J.  Burrows 
John  E.  Burrows 
Edward  A.  Campbell 


100 


*EntitIed  to   Driver's  Badge 


HUCKSTERS— Continued 


No.  of 

No.  of 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Ribbon 

Entry 

Horses 

902 

Louis  Camuzis 

*Charles  Camuzis 

903 

Philip  Cantale 

Philip  Cantale 

904 

John  T.  Coiley 

John  T.  Coiley 

905 

Patrick  A.  Conlin 

Patrick  A.  Conlin 

906 

WilHam  J.  Coughlin 

William  J.  Coughlin 

907 

John  Feroli 

John  Feroli 

908 

Coleman  J.  Foley 

William  F.  Mahoney 

909 

Thomas  Ford 

Thomas  Ford 

910 

"              " 

*Frank  Eustis 

911 

M.  D.  Geaney 

M.  D.  Geaney 

912 

Carmelo  Geraci 

Carmelo  Geraci 

913 

S.  Grishaver 

George  Gatt 

914 

E.  W.  Harrington 

*Rupert  J.  Banks 

915 

U       11                                 li 

*Ralph  E.  Harrington 

916 

John  Harrington 

John  Harrington 

917 

Warren  G.  Holbrook 

Warren  G.  Holbrook 

918 

Charles  Kondres 

Charles  Kondres 

919 

Joseph  Kosopky 

Joseph  Kosopky 

920 

Daniel  J.  McDonald 

Daniel  J.  McDonald 

921 

Wm.  F.  McKinnon 

W.  F.  Ormsby 

922 

"       "              " 

*John  J.  McKinnon 

923 

"       "              " 

William  F.  McKinnon 

924 

"       "              " 

Alfred  Foss 

925 

David  McLaughlin 

John  P.  McLaughlin 

926 

Anton  G.  Marcolefas 

Anton  G.  Marcolefas 

927 

S.  Mercurio 

S.  Mercurio 

928 

Eugene  D.  Monahan 

William  Hartigan 

929 

Patrick  Moynihan 

*Joseph  E.  Moynihan 

930 

Joseph  B.  Nealon 

Joseph  B.  Nealon 

931 

Thomas  F.  Nealon 

Edward  Fink 

932 

Cornelius  O'Leary 

Cornelius  O'Leary 

933 

Dennis  O'Leary 

Dennis  O'Leary 

934 

G.  Panthonys  Brothers 

H.  Panthonys 

935 

M.  Parrish  Brothers 

M.  Parrish 

936 

Alvah  W.  Penney 

Alvah  W.  Penney 

937 

Alfred  H.  Pigott 

Alfred  H.  Pigott 

938 

E.  Roubin 

E.  Roubin 

939 

Myer  Ruchkopky 

Joseph  Ruchkopky 

940 

A.  Sansone 

A.  Sansone 

941 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

942 

M.  H.  Simonds 

M.  H.  Simonds 

943 

Frank  Spadaro 

Frank  Spadaro 

944 

Spanos  Brothers 

Peter  Spanos 

945 

"            " 

James  Spanos 

946 

Morris  Schultz 

Morris  Schultz 

947 

George  Wilson 

George  Wilson 

948 

"             " 

*Albert  E.  Wilson 

949 

Peter  Wolk 

*Hyman  Wolk 

950 

Joseph  C.  Woods 

*Charles  Brehm 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


101 


CLASS  41— EXPRESS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  rihlxjns,  First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  twelve  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


951 

952 
953 
954 
955 
956 
957 
958 
959 
960 
961 
962 
963 
964 
965 
966 
967 
968 
969 
970 
971 
972 
973 
974 
975 
976 
977 
978 
979 


Abbott  &  Miller 

Boyd  Brockton  Transp'tion  Co. 

B.  B.  Freight  &  Express  Co. 


J.  Bierweiler  &  Son 
Boston  &  Hingham  Express 
Boston  &  Springfield  Despatch 

Thomas  M.  Callahan 

Carter,  Russell  Express 
Chase  Express  Co. 


J.  B.  Dolliver 
Dorr's  Express 


Pasquale  Falcucci 
Alexander  Cariepy 
Samuel  Hill 
Howe  &  Co. 


Abraham  Kaplan 


Charles  H.  Newton 

Jos.  P.  Ahearn 

John  Devine 

Thomas  B.  Gaughan 

Thomas  Murtagh 
*Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

Wm.  McKee,  Jr. 
*Edward  W.  Riley 

Frank  H.  Powers 

Thomas  M.  Callahan 
*Charles  T.  Callahan 

Stephen  Peters 

H.  O.  Carlisle 

Roy  Heitman 
*F.  P.  Coakley 

Geo.  E.  Dolliver 
*Harry  F.  Baker 

Geo.  Webster 


Pasquale  Falcucci 
James  E.  Irvin 
Samuel  Hill 
Joseph  Fusoni 
Richard  A.  Fusoni 
*P2dward  T.  Earle 
Alfred  W.  Skidmore 
Alfred  Hoyle 
Abraham  Kaplan 


102 


*EntitIed  to  Driver's  Badge 


EXPRESS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

980 

J.  Kinsley 

J.  Kinsky 

981 

Magee  Express  Co. 

*Bertram  A.  Milroy 

982 

" 

*Harry  R.  Miller 

983 

" 

Chester  W.  Magee 

984 

John  T.  McLaughlin 

John  T.  McLaughlin 

985 

Wm.  Mahony 

*Frank  L.  Ward 

986 

C.  M.  Malone 

Belmont  Malone 

987 

M.  J.  Mulcahy 

*John  E.  Mulcahy 

988 

Parker's  Dedham  Express 

Fred  Hunter 

989 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

990 

E.  Fayette  Powers 

*Herman  La  Clair 

991 

Henry  Roach 

Henry  Roach 

992 

J.  G.  Rose 

J.  G.  Rose 

993 

P.  Rotondo 

Samuel  Cohen 

994 

Herbert  T.  Riigg 

John  E.  Elwell 

995 

" 

A.  D.  Lyons 

996 

" 

Herbert  T.  Rugg 

997 

Savory  Express  Co. 

William  Adams 

998 

" 

*Wm.  J.  Kedian 

999 

Michael  J.Shuckrowe 

Charles  Lutz 

1000 

Suburban  Express 

William  Thayer 

1001 

"                " 

Peter  Watson 

1002 

Technology  Transfer  Co. 

George  Champlin 

1003 

u 

John  H.  Edwards 

1004 

Joseph  F.  Thompson 

Joseph  F.  Thompson 

1005 

W'alkup  Bros.  Express 

Raymond  L.  Allen 

1006 

Waterman  &  Garason 

Max  Cohen 

1007 

Woodsum  Express  Co. 

Orville  H.  Sterling       (25  yrs. 

old)l 

1008 

" 

Robert  Colburn 

1009 

B.  Ziff 

B.  Ziff 

1010 

G.  Zollo 

G.  Zollo 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  B 

adge 

103 


STABLE  INSPECTION 


FIRST  PRIZE 


Stables 

Atlantic  Works 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Babcock,  F.  M. 

Batchelder  Brothers 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Boston  Park  Commission,  Strandway  Stable,  So.  Boston 

Boston  Public  Works  Dept.,  Medford  St.  Stable,  Charlestown 

Boston  Consolidated  Gas  Co. 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co.,  Camden  St.  Stable 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co.,  Baldwin  and  Cambridge  St.  Stable 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co.,  Gainsborough  St.  Stable 

Bray,  W.  C. 

Burns,  John  H. 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Deerfoot  Farm 

East  Boston  Gas  Co.,  Chelsea  Division 

Fox,  George  G.  Co. 

Freedman,  I.  &  Co.^ 

Gahm,  Jos.  &  Son 

Gordon  Supply  Co. 

Huckins,  P.  S.  Co. 

Johnson,  J.  L.,  Arcade  Stable 

Kennett,  R.  A. 

Magee  Express  Co. 

Maiden  Electric  Co. 

McQuesten,  Geo.  Co. 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

Patenaude,  W.  E. 

Pembroke  Stables 

Shaw,  Robert,  Jr. 

Simon  Brothers 

Spaulding,  Geo.  W. 

Stetson  Coal  Co.,  The 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

Walworth  Manufacturing  Co. 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 


Foremen  and  Nightmen 

Wm.  T.  Dunbar 
John  R.  McPhee 
W.  P.  Meehan 
Thos.  Harding 
Fred  Armstrong 
Julius  Weidner 
Charles  Jacobs 
James  Meehan  (Day) 
James    Jennings    (Night) 
Charles  Dillon 
Frank  Sturtevant 
John  Gushing 
Everett  P.  Mclntire 
Michael  Lane 
William  Kenney 
Michael  Bradley 
George  H.  Carter 
James  I.  Brooks 
Louis    H.    Steinberg 
Dennis  Healey 
R.  T.  Watts 
George  H.  Purcell 
J.  Lewis  Johnson 
John  Gilpin 
M.  J.  Whalen 
James  Reardon 
John  H.  Keyes 
Henry  La  Croix 
J.  B.  Swett 
Daniel  Craffey 
Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 
Jos.  A.  Simons 
Wm.  E.  Eaton 
James  Hurst 
Frank  McElroy 
Thomas  Mooney 
Charles  A.  Sutton 


104 


STABLE   INSPECTION— Continued 


FIRST    PRIZE— Continued 


Stables 
Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

Woods,  Joseph  C. 
Wright,  John 


Foremen  and  Nightmen 

M.  J.  Shea  (Day) 
Joseph    Perkins    (Night) 
Charles  Brehm 
John  Wright 
George  Prichard 


SECOND  PRIZE 
Stables  Foremen 

Boston  Park  Commission,  Audubon  Road  Stable  Fred  Plyer 
Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co.,  Dorchester  Ave.  Stable,  So.  Boston      James  Carey 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  West  1st  St.  Stable,  So.  Boston  William  Hawley 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  Rutherford  Ave.  Stable,  Charlestown  Wm.  Johnson 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  Rutherford  Ave.  Stable,  Charlestown  John  Hussey 

Chase  Express  Co.,  Brookline  John    Meehan 

Eastern  Storage  Co.  Brigham  P.  Fay 

Edgcomb,  Albert  Herbert  Preirot 

Eddy,  C.  F.  Co.  Thomas  Rouse 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  M.  J.  Commins 

McEnany,  J.  W.,  J.  W.  Mahoney 

Page,  W^  R.  Lyman  Pentze 

Union  Glass  Co.  John  J.  Brady 

White.  R.  H.  Co.  William  Burns 

Whitney,  J.  W.  J.  W.  Whitney 

Woods,  Jos.  C.  Charles  Brehm 


THIRD  PRIZE 

Stables 
Boston  Park  Commission,  Franklin  Park  Stable 
Boston  Ice  Co.,  Lamartine  Street  Stable 
Carter,  Russell  Co. 
Ferguson  Co.,  J.  G.  &  B.  S. 
Gove,  Austin  &  Son.,  Inc. 


Foremen 
Michael  Glynn 
Lewis  Smith 
Herbert  E.  Johnson 
Lewis  H.  Steinberg 
Joseph  Connolly 


105 


MEN  AND  HORSES 


One  fact  has  often  forced  itself  upon  the 
attention  of  the  Directors,  namely,  that  the 
welfare  of  the  work-horse  is  bound  up  with 
the  welfare  of  the  men  who  drive  and  care 
for  him.  In  stables  where  the  men  are  well 
paid  and  are  treated  with  kindness  and  con- 
sideration by  the  proprietors,  the  horses,  in 
turn,  are  well  treated  by  the  men,  and  look 
sleek  and  contented.  On  the  other  hand, 
in  stables  where  there  is  bad  feeling,  or 
utter  want  of  good  feeling,  between  the  em- 
ployer and  his  men,  the  horses  suffer  ac- 
cordingly. Recognizing  these  facts,  some 
public-spirited  women  in  New  York  and 
also  in  Chicago  have  recently  organized 
clubs  for  teamsters,  and  even  clubs  for 
teamsters'  wives.  This  is  a  step  in  the 
right  direction. 

Bad  teamsters  seem  to  gravitate  natu- 
rally to  employers  who  do  not  really  care 
about  their  horses.  If  the  owner  is  a  hu- 
mane man,  the  spirit  of  humanity  will  per- 
vade his  whole  business.  If  he  is  cruel  or 
simply  indifferent,  a  spirit  of  brutality,  or 
at  least  of  selfish  indifference,  will  run 
through  his  force. 

The  highly  developed  nervous  system  of 
the  horse  renders  him  peculiarly  capable  of 
suffering.  Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops 
far  short  of  absolute  brutality,  keeps  him 
in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation. 
Anyone  who  is  accustomed  to  observe 
horses  can  tell  by  a  single  glance  at  a  given 
horse  whether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad,  or 
indifferent  one.  The  expression  of  the 
animal's  eye  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears 
tell  the  story  unmistakably. 

There  are  many  teamsters  who  treat  the 
horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and  there- 
fore are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty  toward 
him,  which  reacts  on  their  own  characters. 
Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their 
lives,  and  their  daily  labor  becomes  a  deg- 
radation and  a  curse  to  them. 


On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many  hu- 
mane drivers,  who  have  a  real  affection  for 
their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in 
their  appearance.  These  men  make  good 
husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens;  and 
their  daily  labor  is  not  only  a  means  of 
livelihood,  but  a  constant  source  of  happi- 
ness. To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is 
the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association. 

QUALITY  IN  WORK-HORSES 

Our  judges  are  instructed  not  to  award 
blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  to  any  horse,  no 
matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is 
a  horse  of  good  type  and  quality.  Quality, 
it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in 
a  work-horse  as  in  a  race-horse.  Quality 
might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness 
of  texture  which  good  breeding  produces. 
The  bone  in  a  well-bred  horse  is  more 
dense  and  less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a 
coarse-bred  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course, 
that  well-bred  horses  are  sometimes  defi- 
cient in  quality,  but  no  horse  has  quality 
unless  he  is  well-bred.  The  horse  with 
quality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less 
subject  to  disease  and  to  unsoundness  of 
feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse. 
Consequently  it  is  more  humane  to  use 
horses  with  quality  than  those  without 
quality.  Quality  and  beauty  are  usually 
found  together,  and  yet,  as  all  horsemen 
know,  one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A 
horse  may  have  quality  without  being  in 
the  least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may  jj 
have  a  yewe  neck,  a  large  head,  long  ears,  ■ 
a  Roman  nose,  a  sway  back,  flat  sides,  slack 
loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a  rat  tail; 
and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silky,  if  his 
head  though  large  is  bony  and  well-cut,  if 
his  ears  tliough  long  are  well-shaped,  if  his 
legs  are  flat  and  clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are 
of  fine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has 


106 


quality.     Horses  of   the  Shire  and   Clyde  ting,   glove-like  skin;  hair  fine  and   silky, 

breeds  often  look  coarse  at  first  sight  on  an    abundance    of    finish    and    absence    of 

account  of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy  coarseness,      but      not      necessarily    small 

legs,   but  in   the  best  specimens  of  these  bone.     When  slightly  exerted  the  skin  will 

breeds  the  long  hair  about  the  fetlocks  is  show  clearly  an  intricate  network  of  veins, 

fine  and  silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not  Coarse  hair  is   usually  associated  with   a 

handsome,  are  clean-cut.  coarse  skin  and  a  soft,  spongy  bone  which 

Quality  is  thus  described   by   Professor  is  weak  and  subject  to  disease.     With  qual- 

Rufus    C.    Obrccht    of    the    Unixersity   of  ity  the  muscles  stand  out  prominently  and 

Illinois:  "  Quality  in  a  horse  is  of  prime  are  clearly  defined,  which  aids  in  giving  a 

importance.     This   term  when  applied   to  horse  finish.     Quality  is  a  strong  indica- 

horses  has  reference  to  their  bones,  skin,  tion  of  the  extent  of  a  horse's  endurance, 

hair  and  muscles.     Its  presence  is  shown  These  two  characteristics  are  closely  asso- 

by   clean-cut   features   of   the   head;  firm,  ciated,  and  a  horse  lacking  in  quality  is 

clean  bone;  tendons  well  defined;  close  fit-  comparatively   a  cheap  animal." 


Cfje  #ors;e's;  draper 

(Distributed  by  the  Mass.  S.  P.  C.  A.) 

To  THEE,  MY  MASTER,  I  offer  my  prayer:  Feed  me,  water  and  care  for  me,  and,  when  the 
day's  work  is  done,  provide  me  with  shelter,  a  clean,  dry  bed^nd  a.  stall  wide  enough  for  me  to  lie  down  in 
comfort. 

Always  be  kind  to  me.  Talk  to  me.  Your  voice  often  means  as  much  to  me  as  the  reins.  Pet 
me  sometimes,  that  I  may  serve  you  the  more  gladly  and  learn  to  love  you.  Do  not  jerk  the  reins,  and 
do  not  whip  me  when  going  up  hill.  Never  strike,  beat  or  kick  me  when  I  do  not  understand  what  you 
want,  but  give  me  a  chance  to  understand  you.  Watch  me,  and  if  I  fail  to  do  your  bidding,  see  if  something 
is  not  wrong  with  my  harness  or  feet. 

Do  not  check  me  so  that  I  cannot  have  the  free  use  of  my  head.  If  you  insist  that  I  wear  blinders, 
so  that  I  cannot  see  behind  me  as  it  was  intended  I  should,  I  pray  you  be  careful  that  the  blinders  stand 
well  out  from  my  eyes. 

Do  not  overload  me,  or  hitch  me  where  water  will  drip  on  me.  Keep  me  well  shod.  Examine 
my  teeth  when  I  do  not  eat.  I  may  have  an  ulcerated  tooth;  and  that,  you  know,  is  very  painful.  Do 
not  tie  my  head  in  an  unnatural  position,  or  take  away  my  best  defense  against  flies  and  mosquitoes  by 
cutting  off  my  tail. 

I  cannot  tell  you  when  I  am  thirsty,  so  give  me  clean,  cool  water  often.  Save  me,  by  all  means  in 
your  power,  from  that  fatal  disease — the  glanders.  I  cannot  tell  you  in  words  when  I  am  sick,  so  watch 
me,  that  by  signs  you  may  know  my  condition.  Giv^e  me  all  possible  shelter  from  the  hot  sun,  and  put 
a  blanket  on  me,  not  when  I  am  working,  but  when  I  am  standing  in  the  cold.  Never  put  a  frosty  bit  in 
my  mouth;  first  warm  it  by  holding  it  a  moment  in  your  hands. 

I  try  to  carry  you  and  }our  burdens  without  a  murmur,  and  wait  patiently  for  you  long  hours  of 
the  day  or  night.  Without  the  power  to  choose  my  shoes  or  path,  I  sometimes  fall  on  the  hard  pavements 
which  I  have  often  prayed  might  not  be  of  wood,  but  of  such  a  nature  as  to  give  me  a  safe  and  sure  footing. 
Remember  that  I  must  be  ready  at  any  moment  to  lose  my  life  in  your  service. 

And  finally,  O  MY  MASTER,  when  my  useful  strength  is  gone,  do  not  turn  me  out  to  starve  or 
freeze,  or  sell  me  to  some  cruel  owner,  to  be  slowly  tortured  and  starved  to  death;  but  do  thou,  my  master, 
take  my  life  in  the  kindest  way,  and  your  God  will  reward  you  here  and  hereafter.  You  will  not  consider 
me  irreverent  if  I  ask  this  in  the  name  of  Him  who  was  born  in  a  Stable. — Amen. 


107 


BULLETINS 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins   may  be  had   on  application 

NO.  1— WATERING  AND  BEDDING 


ISSIIEO  IN  11)01) 


During  the  past  five  months  an  agent  of 
this  Association  has  \isited  157  stables, 
including  almost  all  the  large  livery  and 
hoarding  stables  in  Boston  and  the  neigh- 
boring cities  and  towns.  One  object  of 
these  inspections  was  to  ascertain  the  prac- 
tice in  regard  to  watering  the  horses  during 
the  night,  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay, 
and  in  regard  to  bedding  them  in  the  day 
time,  as  well  as  at  night,  especially  on 
Sundays.  The  agent  submits  the  follow- 
ing report: — 

THE    WATERING    OF    HORSES    AT 
NIGHT 

In  most  cases  all  the  hay  which  horses 
in  the  city  receive  is  fed  to  them  at  night. 
It  is  therefore  especially  important  that 
they  should  be  watered  during  the  night. 
In  an  inspection  of  over  150  of  the  leading 
livery  and  boarding  stables  in  Boston  and 
the  vicinity,  particular  attention  was  paid 
to  this  matter.  All  authorities  agree,  and 
experience  teaches,  that  city  horses  should 
be  watered  between  8  P.  M.  (9  P.  M.  would 
be  better)  and  midnight;  but  it  was  found 
that  less  than  half  of  the  stables  visited  give 
their  horses  water  after  7  P.  M. 

And  yet  more  stablemen  volunteered  in- 
formation on  this  subject  than  upon  any 
other  matter  considered  in  the  five  months 
during  which  the  investigations  were  made. 
"  A  horse  comes  in  hungry,"  was  the  usual 
way  of  putting  it,  "  and  he  wants  his  sup- 
per so  much  that  he  will  drink  but  little; 
and  he  ought  not  to  drink  deeply  at  that 
time,  even  if  he  wants  to.  Then  he  eats 
a  quantity  of  dry,  heating  food.  He 
shouldn't  have  water  right  after  eating; 
but  if  he  doesn't  get  a  good  drink  two  or 
three  hours  later,  he  will  go  through  the 

108 


night  thirsty,  and  the  heating  food  will 
burn  out  his  insides  for  the  lack  of  the 
water  that  is  needed  to  give  the  nourish- 
ment of  the  food  a  chance  to  do  the  good  it 
ought  to  be  doing."  Moreover,  a  horse  not 
watered  at  night  is  very  apt  to  drink  too 
much  in  the  morning. 

This  night-watering  is  not  only  common 
humanity  in  hot  weather,  but  it  is  almost 
equally  valuable  in  winter.  For  appetite 
comes  with  the  bracing  efifect  of  cold 
weather,  and  horses  eat  more  than  they  do 
in  summer.  Consequently,  if  this  extra 
food  is  to  do  its  part  in  giving  the  horse 
power  to  resist  the  cold  and  the  strain  of 
winter  work,  water  must  be  given  at  the 
time  when  it  will  do  the  most  good,  which 
is,  in  most  cases,  between  8  and  10  P.  M., 
or  even  later.  Nothing  does  so  much 
toward  giving  back  a  return  for  the  food 
given  in  the  way  of  extra  strength,  working 
endurance  and  good  condition.  M 

The  effect  of  this  night-watering  on  the  ^ 
blood  and  general  circulation  is  far  reach- 
ing. The  thirst  that  follows  the  digestion 
of  a  meal  is  the  call  of  nature  for  the  water 
that  is  needed  to  help  the  good  of  the  food 
to  get  into  the  flesh  and  blood  of  the  ani- 
mal; and  equally  important  is  the  part 
played  by  the  water  in  sending  the  waste 
matter  out  of  the  body  with  the  least  pos- 
sible wear  and  tear  on  the  organs  that  per- 
form this  indispensable  duty.  A  horse  that 
remains  thirsty  all  night  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  last  so  long  as  one  that  is  watered 
at  the  i)roper  time.* 


*If  anyone  doiilns  whether  horses  need  watering 
at  night,  let  him  go  into  a  stable,  say  at  9  P.  M., 
turn  loose  the  horses  which  have  not  been  watered 
since  they  were  fed,  and  observe  how  eagerly  they 
will  make  for  the  watering-trough. — H.  C.  M. 


BEDDING  AND  REST 

There  were  twenty-five  horses  in  a  stable 
not  far  from  Boston  that  was  visited  one 
Sunday  morning.  The  horses  were  a  fair, 
average  lot  of  the  kind  used  in  delivery 
wagons  and  in  general  business.  Most  of 
them  were  in  reasonably  good  working 
order,  and  the  stable  had  the  appearance 
of  being  well-kept. 

Of  the  twenty-five  horses  in  the  stable 
tw^enty-four  were  standing  up,  and  just  one 
was  lying  down.  In  twenty-four  stalls 
there  was  no  bedding;  in  one  there  was  a 
good  supply.  One  doesn't  have  to  be  a 
wizard  to  guess  that  the  horse  that  was 
getting  a  needed  rest  was  in  the  same  stall 
with  the  bedding.  All  the  other  horses 
were  being  deprived  of  what  might  be  the 
best  part  of  their  Sunday,  namely,  the  op- 
portunity of  taking  their  weight  off  legs 
and  feet  that  usually  have  all,  and  more, 
than  they  can  do  to  stand  the  strain  of  the 
week-day  wear  and  tear. 

In  another  stable  there  is  a  horse  that 
works  in  a  single  grocery  wagon.  He  is 
between  the  shafts  three  days,  but  every 
fourth  day  remains  in  the  stable.  Each 
morning  brings  him  exactly  the  same 
breakfast,  and  there  is  absolutely  nothing 
in  the  care  given  that  tells  him  whether  he 
is  to  go  out  or  stay  in.  But  he  knows  how 
to  keep  his  own  calendar,  and  every  fourth 
morning,  just  as  soon  as  he  has  finished 
eating,  he  lies  down  in  comfort  on  the  plen- 
tiful supply  of  bedding  which  is  kept  under 
every  horse  in  that  stable  at  all  times;  and 
he  frequently  stays  down  the  better  part  of 
the  day. 

In  still  another  stable  there  are  pairs  of 
horses  that  are  used  half  a  day  and  rested 


the  other  half.  Encouraged  by  plenty  of 
bedding,  they  have  formed  habits  of  resting 
their  legs  and  feet  at  every  possible  oppor- 
tunity. 

There  is  an  old  saying  that  a  good  city 
horse  could  use  up  four  sets  of  legs  and 
feet.  This  means  that  a  large  part  of  his 
bodily  strength  and  endurance  is  wasted 
because  lameness  and  suffering  wear  out 
the  unfortunate  animal  long  before  his 
time.  "  His  shoulders  is  all  gone  savin'  his 
legs,"  was  the  way  one  stableman  described 
the  condition  of  a  horse  who  had  worked 
his  body  muscles  to  pieces  in  trying  to  ease 
the  strain  on  his  battered  legs  and  feet. 

As  in  the  case  of  watering  at  night,  the 
extra  expense  of  giving  a  day-time  bed  to 
a  horse  is  slight,  compared  with  the  great 
benefit  gained  from  the  rest  and  chance  for 
repairs  given  the  legs.  The  good  that 
comes  out  of  this  is  reflected  in  the  condi- 
tion of  the  whole  body;  and  all  who  own 
horses  should  see  that  this  chance  for 
needed  rest  is  given  their  horses  whenever 
they  are  in  the  stable.  A  horse  will  not  lie 
down  on  stable  planks  unless  worn  and 
weary  beyond  the  point  where  it  is  right  to 
use  any  animal. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Agent. 

The  Directors  of  this  Association  earn- 
estly submit  the  foregoing  facts  and  obser- 
vations to  owners  of  work-horses  and  to 
keepers  of  boarding  and  livery  stables, 
partly  as  a  matter  of  economy,  but  still 
more  as  a  matter  of  humanity. 


Postscript.  During  the  past  winter  four  or  five 
owners  of  work-horses,  with  large  stables,  have,  at  our 
suggestion,  given  their  horses  a  good  bed  through  the 
day  on  Sundays  ;  and  in  each  case  they  report  that  the 
horses  take  advantagre  of  it,  and  are  the  better  for  it. 


109 


BULLETIN    No.  4 

VACATIONS   FOR   WORK-HORSES 

{Especially    from    the    Economic    Point    of    View) 
By  GILBERT  TOMPKINS  and  HENRY  C.  MERWIN 


Everyone  will  admit  that  to  give  a 
work-horse  an  annual  vacation  is  an  act 
of  humanity,  and,  we  believe,  it  can  be 
shown  that  it  is  an  act  of  economy  also. 
Se\eral  years  ago  one  of  the  writers  of  this 
bulletin  was  asked  the  following  question 
b>'  the  owner  of  an  old  horse,  not  a  work- 
horse in  this  case,  but  a  carriage  horse- — 
"  What  shall  I  do  with  him?  He  is  getting 
old  and  stiff  and  too  slow  to  use.  Shall 
I  kill  him, — or  what?"  The  answer  was: — 
"  Try  giving  him  a  summer's  rest,  or  per- 
haps even  a  vacation  of  six  months.  Take 
his  shoes  off,  let  him  have  plenty  of  grass 
or  bran,  and  reduce  his  grain  about  one- 
half."  Six  months  later  the  writer  met 
the  owner  of  this  horse,  who  exclaimed: 
"  I  am  much  obliged  to  you  for  giving  me 
a  new  horse!"  Being  asked  what  he  meant, 
he  replied  that  the  vacation  given  to  his 
old  horse  had  so  rejuvenated  him  that  he 
was  almost  as  good  as  ever,  and  was  doing 
his  work  as  a  carriage  horse  with  satis- 
faction to  his  owner  and  himself.  Similar 
cases  will  be  found  stated  in  the  appendix. 

Another  experience  was  the  following: 
A  humane  person  bought  an  old  cab  horse 
in  the  city, — a  very  old  horse,  much  over 
twenty.  This  horse  was  so  stiff  and  re- 
duced in  strength  that  it  was  with  some 
difticulty  that  he  was  driven  out  to  the 
country.  Six  months  later  he  had  lim- 
bered up  completely,  and  was  supple  and 
active  enough  to  run  away  with  the 
faimer  who  had  charge  of  him.  There 
are  thousands  of  work-horses  hard  at  work 
in  cities  today  who  have  begun  to  run 
down  hill,  and  will  be  worthless  or  nearly 
so  within  a  year  or  two;  and  yet  if  these 
horses  could  be  given  a  rest  and  a  chance 
to  recuperate,  they  would  in  six  months' 
time  be  worth  almost  as  much  as  the  price 
originally    paid    for    them. 

Horses    are    scarce    and    high,    with    no 


prospect  of  lower  prices  or  of  a  better 
supply,  and  if  a  profit  is  to  be  made  from 
the  use  of  them,  the  loss  occasioned  by 
wear  and  tear  must  be  kept  down.  Any 
business  that  considers  merely  its  annual 
income  without  regard  to  the  depreciation 
account  w^ill  soon  be  in  a  bad  state.  It 
is  well  known  that  an  average  horse  will 
last  twice  as  long  with  one  kind  of  a  driver 
as  he  will  with  a  worse  kind,  and  with  an 
annual  vacation  instead  of  constant,  un- 
remitting labor,  his  health  and  usefulness 
will  be  correspondingly  increased.  Work 
and  action  must  be  followed  by  rest  and 
relaxation.  Even  iron  and  steel  have 
their  limits,  and  machinery  itself  cannot 
be  overtaxed  without  a  loss  of  efficiency. 
Flesh  and  blood,  mind  and  nerve,  energy 
and  courage,  all  these  must  depend  on 
rest  periods  in  which  nature  may  bring 
them  back  to  their  normal  strength. 
This  is  more  widely  recognized  every  year 
in  its  application  to  human  beings,  and 
it  is  time  that  those  who  own  or  use 
horses  should  realize  that  the  same  prin- 
ciple is  equally  applicable  to  horse-flesh. 


THE   EFFECT  OF   CITY  WORK  ON 
HORSES 

Work-horses  in  the  city,  if  worked  too 
hard  or  too  fast,  or  if  not  properly  cared 
for,  or  if  weakened  by  age,  deteriorate  in 
the  following  different  ways: 

(1)  They  become  thin. 

(2)  Their  feet  become  sore  or  diseased. 

(3)  They  become  grain-burnt  or  other- 
wise weakened  in  digestion. 

(4j  Their  muscles  become  tired  and 
strained. 

Let  us  take  these  up  in  their  order. 

(1;  The  first  symptom  of  age  in  a 
horse   is  apt   to   be   a   falling-off  in   flesh. 


110 


Others  become  thin  from  ha\ing  a  bad 
driver,  or  Irom  being  over-hurried  in  their 
work,  or  from  poor  feeding.  A  short  rest 
will  often  do  wonders  for  a  horse  in  this 
condition. 

(2)  The  F'eet. — Unquestionably  the 
best  way  to  majce  a  horse's  feet  last  in  the 
city  is  to  shoe  him  with  rubber  or  leather 
pads  and  plenty  of  tar  and  oakum  under- 
neath. This  keeps  the  feet  soft,  and 
deadens  the  concussion.  But,  with  the 
best  of  shoeing,  horses'  feet  will  give  out 
on  the  pavements,  and  nothing  will  tend 
to  preserve  their  feet  more  than  an  occa- 
sional let-up  during  which  their  shoes  can 
be  removed,  their  feet  can  get  back  to  the 
ground,  their  heels  can  expand,  and  fever 
in  the  feet  may  be  reduced  by  the  moisture 
of  dew  and  wet  grass,  swampy  land,  etc. 

(3)  The  Grain-Burnt  Horse. — It 
must  be  remembered  that  a  horse  at  work 
in  the  city  is  not  in  a  normal  condition. 
The  constant  feeding  on  dry  food,  and  es- 
pecially on  such  stimulating  food  as  oats 
and  corn,  produces  an  unnatural  condi- 
tion of  the  blood.  All  city  horse-owners 
know  and  dread  the  disease  of  the  kidneys 
called  "  black-water."  This  is  especially 
a  Monday  morning  disease,  and  when  a 
Sunday  and  a  holiday  come  together,  so 
that  the  work-horse  has  two  days  of  con- 
tinuous rest,  many  cases  of  black-water 
always  occur.  One  year  in  Chicago  there 
were  150  deaths  from  this  disease  in  one 
day.  Even  if  a  horse  does  not  suffer  from 
acute  disease  of  this  kind,  his  w^hole  system 
becomes  feverish  and  abnormal  from  years 
of  high  graining  without  any  chance  to  get 
back  to  nature,  such  as  a  horse  gets  by 
being  turned  out  to  grass.  Everybody 
who  has  seen  a  horse  turned  loose  in  a  lot 
after  being  confined  in  a  stable  must  have 
observed  how  he  first  paws  up  a  little  turf 
with  his  forefoot,  and  thus  gets  at  the  earth 
underneath.  He  is  more  anxious  to  eat 
this  earth  than  to  eat  the  grass,  and  it  is 
certain  that  the  earth  is  wholesome  for  the 
horse.  It  has  a  cleansing  effect  and  is  a 
cure  for  worms.  Nothing,  in  short,  is  so 
good  for  the  digestion  of  a  horse,  especially 
after  long  >ears  of  confinement  in  a  stable 
and  high  feeding,  than  an  opportunity  to 
eat  grass  and  earth. 

(4)  Tired  Muscles. — Not  everybody 
realizes  that  a  horse,  to  the  eye,  may  be 
in  perfect  condition,  and  yet  his  muscles 


may  be  so  tired  and  strained  that  move- 
ment is  positixely  painful  to  him,  and  any 
movement  l)ut  a  slow  one  almost  impos- 
sible. Work-horses  and  hack-horses  in 
this  condition  are  often  seen  in  the  street, 
especially  when  they  begin  to  grow  old. 
These  horses  look  fairly  fat  and  sleek,  but 
they  are  tired,  their  heads  droop,  they  have 
no  life  and  they  lack  energy  and  quickness 
of  movement.  Nothing  but  a  rest  will 
restore  these  horses;  but  a  rest  of  a  few 
months  will  do  it,  and  it  will  increase  their 
value  at  least  one-half.  The  writer  of 
this  Bulletin  remembers  seeing  a  horse  used 
by  a  rural  free  delivery  mail-carrier  that, 
being  naturally  a  good  feeder,  and  having 
all  the  grain  that  he  would  eat,  was  in  fine 
bodily  condition;  but  he  did  double  the 
work  of  an  ordinary  horse,  that  is,  he 
travelled  twenty-three  miles  a  day  for  six 
days  in  the  w^eek,  and  he  was  so  tired  and 
stifif  that  it  was  difficult  to  urge  him  from 
a  walk  into  a  trot.  It  is  from  this  stifTen- 
ing  of  the  muscles  that  a  horse  really  grows 
old,  and  if  the  muscles  are  restored  by  an 
annual  vacation  the  useful  life  of  the  horse 
will  be  extended  to  an  astonishing  degree. 

A  VACATION   AT   HOME 

Many  stables,  especially  truck-horse 
stables,  are  so  situated  that  a  horse  can  be 
given  a  very  good  vacation  without  send- 
ing him  away.  That  is,  there  is  a  yard 
connected  with  the  stable  where  the  horse 
can  be  turned  loose  in  fine  weather,  with 
his  shoes  off.  His  feed  should,  of  course, 
be  changed  to  meet  the  changed  condition 
of  his  life.  His  oats  should  be  reduced  at 
least  one-half,  but  always  according  to  the 
age  of  the  horse,  and  plenty  of  bran  should 
be  given  to  him,  with  carrots,  turnips  and 
other  vegetables,  and,  if  possible,  some 
grass,  now  and  then,  sent  in  from  neigh- 
boring farms.  In  this  way  the  horse  can 
derive  pretty  nearly  all  the  benefits  of  a 
vacation  in  the  country  without  the  ex- 
pense of  sending  him  away,  and  without 
separating  him  from  his  well-known  and 
beloved  companions. 

A  VACATION   IN   THE   COUNTRY 

It  is  hardly  necessary  to  say  that  the 
greatest  care  should  be  taken  in  selecting 
the  farm  where  the  horse  is  to  be  turned 


111 


out  for  a  rest.  Few  farmers  know  how  to 
care  for  a  horse,  or  will  take  any  trouble 
to  make  him  comfortable.  It  must  be 
remembered,  of  course,  that  the  city  horse, 
being  used  to  high  feed,  cannot  have  all 
his  grain  taken  away  from  him,  especially 
if  he  be  an  old  horse,  without  falling  into 
a  worse  condition  than  his  former  one. 
I '  nless  he  is  a  young  horse  in  rich  pasturage, 
he  must  receive  some  grain  every  day,  and 
the  old  horse  will  need  a  good  deal,  per- 
haps one-half  of  his  usual  ration.  Another 
thing  to  be  looked  out  for  is  the  annoyance 
from  flies  and  mosquitoes.  This  is  so 
great,  except  in  farms  situated  on  high 
groimd,  that  a  horse,  especially  a  city  horse, 
cannot  be  turned  out  all  day  or  even  all 
night  in  a  pasture  or  field  without  losing 
more  than  he  would  gain.  In  pastures 
of  northern  New  England,  where  the  land 
is  at  a  comparatively  high  altitude  and 
the  nights  are  cool,  horses  can  be  turned 
out  day  and  night;  but  within  thirty 
or  fifty  miles  of  Boston,  in  midsummer, 
there  is  hardly  more  than  an  hour  or  so, 
in  the  whole  twenty-four  hours,  when  a 
horse  can  be  turned  out  without  being 
driven  almost  crazy  by  flies  in  the  daytime, 
and    mosquitoes   at   night. 


RECONSTRUCTED   HORSES 

At  the  annual  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  in  1910  a  new  class  was  estab- 
lished,— a  class  not  only  new  in  the  parade, 
but  ncAcr  before  gi\'en  at  any  work-horse 
I)arade  or  horse-shcnv.  This  was  a  class 
for  reconstructed  horses,  that  is,  horses 
run  down  by  neglect  or  abuse  in  the  hands 
ol  one  owner,  and  restored  to  health  and 
strength  by  rest  and  good  treatment  in 
the  hands  of  another.  This  class  furnished 
some  striking  examples  of  wiiat  can  be 
done  by  giving  a  horse  a  chance  to  recuper- 
ate. One  of  the  horses  exhibited  w^as  a 
sound  animal,  but  he  had  been  worked  hard 
for  eight  years,  was  completely  worked 
out,  and  was  supposed  to  be  worthless. 
He  was  bought  for  a  song  and  restored 
by  three  months'  rest.  Another  horse, 
bought  two  years  before  in  a  positively 
emaciated  condition,  was  entirely  made 
over  by  a  vacation  spent  chiefly  in  a 
box  stall,  with  plenty  of  mashes,  etc.,  and 
within  a  year  was  sold  for  $245.    Another, 


bought  for  .S75,  in  the  Fall,  Irom  a  pro\'ision 
dealer  whose  horses  are  knocked  about  by 
boy  drivers,  was  restored  to  health  by  a 
rest,  and  sold  for  $300  in  the  spring. 
Another  horse,  only  eight  years  old,  sound 
except  for  blindness,  was  bought  in  the 
Fall  for  $15,  as  he  lay  in  the  gutter  too  weak 
to  get  up.  He  then  weighed  1040  pounds; 
four  months  afterward  he  was  a  strong, 
powerful  animal  weighing  1360  pounds. 
In  the  appendix  will  be  found  se\'eral 
letters  which  give  some  striking  illustra- 
tions of  the  value  of  a  vacation  for  work- 
horses. 


VACATION    BY   PIECE-MEAL 

One  way  of  giving  a  horse  a  vacation 
is  to  increase  the  number  of  horses  at 
work  for  any  firm  or  concern,  so  as  to 
permit  each  horse  to  lay  off  one  day  out 
of  the  six  working  days,  or  to  work  half 
a  day  only  for  one  or  more  working  days 
in  the  week.  For  example,  suppose  a 
given  concern  has  work  enough  to  keep 
four  three-hundred-dollar  horses  busy.  Let 
them  add  one  horse  to  the  equipment,  so 
that  there  will  be  five  horses  for  the  work. 
This  would  relieve  toil-worn  legs  and  feet 
and  over-strained  bodies  and  digestion, 
would  lessen  somewhat  the  amount  of 
grain  required  for  each  horse,  and  would 
greatly  reduce  the  annual  depreciation 
in  the  value  of  each  horse.  In  this  way, 
it  is  speaking  within  bounds  to  say,  that 
the  working  life  of  all  the  horses  would 
be  prolonged  from  an  average  of  six  years 
to  an  average  of  ten  years. 

It  should  be  remembered  also  that  a 
horse  in  good  condition  and  spirits  is  far 
more  efficient,  and  will  get  over  far  more 
ground  in  a  day,  than  one  that  is  jaded 
or  stiff  from  overwork;  and  besides,  the 
good,  active  horse  tends  to  make  the 
driver  a  better  and  more  efficient  employee. 
Another  consideration  is  the  advertising 
v^ilue  of  a  good  horse  in  good  condition  and 
spirits.  This  increases  every  year,  and  in 
cities  where  work-horse  parades  are  held 
it  increases  very  fast.  Customers  look 
more  and  more  at  the  horse  used,  directly 
or  indirectly,  in  supplying  their  wants, 
and  a  fine  horse  gives  an  appearance  of 
success  and  up-to-dateness  that  is  worth 
much  more  liian  it  costs. 


112 


APPENDIX 


TESTIMONY     AS    TO    VACATIONS 
FOR  WORK-HORSES 

A  large  bakery  concern  in  Boston, 
the  George  G.  Fox  Co.  says: — 

"  Our  system  is  to  give  eacii  of  our 
horses  two  weeks  at  pasture  every  year, 
sending  them  four  at  a  time  while  the 
season  lasts.  We  are  well  pleased  with 
the  results." 

EXPERIENCE  OF  A  LEADING  TRUCKMAN 

(Letter   to   the   President    of    the     Boston    Work- 
Horse    Parade    Association.) 

Boston,  May  15,  191L 
Dear  Sir: — 

I  write  this  letter  to  call  your  attention  to  a 
gray  mare,  stone  blind,  which  we  worked  in  our 
business  for  fourteen  years.  When  she  had  been 
worked  for  about  twelve  years,  she  seemed  to  have 
a  general  breakdown,  and  about  that  time  you  and 
I  had  a  conversation  in  regard  to  "  reconstructed 
horses,"  and  you  advised  me  to  give  this  mare 
two  months  la^'-off  and  see  what  effect  it  would 
have.  I  followed  your  instructions — we  have  a 
large  yard — and  this  mare  was  turned  out  every 
day,  and  most  of  the  time  we  hired  a  boy  to  take 
her  out  and  give  her  some  grass.  In  two  months' 
time  she  came  back  perfectly  well  and  seemingly 
as  good  as  ever.  We  worked  her  for  about  two 
years  from  that  time,  and  then  wc  pensioned  her 
and  sent  her  to  a  farm. 

We  have  done  the  same  thing  with  three  others, 
and  one  of  these  was  run  down  so  badly  that  our 
veterinary  surgetJfi"  advised  me  to  have  him  killed. 
He  declared  that  one  of  thjs  horse's  lungs  was  nearly 
gone,  and  thought  he  was  not  worth  one  dollar. 
We  had  used  this  horse  for  about  eight  years,  and 
concluded  that  we  would  try  giving  him  a  rest. 
After  three  months'  rest  he  was  one  of  the  hand- 
somest horses  in  Boston,  and  he  remained  so  for 
about  two  years,  and  last  year  was  shown  with 
the  "  reconstructed  horses  "  in  the  Work-Horse 
Parade.  This  year  he  died  of  blackwater  on 
account  of  his  being  so  fleshy. 

Our  experience  simply  shows  that  your  idea  of 
a  vacation  for  horses  that  are  run  down  is  correct, 
and  I  hope  that  many  other  horse  owners  will  make 
the  same  experiment.  The  results  I  have  no 
cjuestion  in  regard  to. 

Very  truly  yours, 

WM.  D.  QUL\IB^■. 

THE  EXPERIENCE  OF  AN  EXPRESSMAN 

"  This  horse  went  to  pieces  after  eight  years  of 
city  delivery  work,  and  wasn't  worth  anything. 
When  he  came  to  us,  his  legs  were  swollen,  kidneys 
weak,  one  lung  going  and  the  other  almost  gone. 
He  couldn't  even  go  down  an  easy  incline  with(nit 


stopping  and  struggling  for  breath.  He  was  given 
some  physic,  and  then  laid  off  for  the  summer.  Wc 
hired  boys  to  lead  him  (and  other  horses)  in  the 
grass  of  some  open  lots  while  the  dew  was  on  it,  and 
let  them  graze  afternoons.  We  gave  this  horse 
the  freedom  of  the  barn  and  the  yard,  and  after  a 
while  he  began  stealing  the  other  horses'  feed  on 
his  own  account.  He  finally  filled  out  and  improved 
so  much  that  I  took  him  for  my  own  use.  Now  he 
feels  so  well  that  he  won't  even  walk  up  hill.  He's 
also  a  little  on  the  alarm-clock  pattern;  when  he 
stands  in  front  of  the  offics  evenings,  you  have  to 
tie  him  a  little  before  six  o'clock,  or  he  will  go  home 
to  supper  and  the  stable  of  his  own  notion." 

Other  horses  that  have  been  re-built  by 
this  same  owner  have  been  sold  well,  are 
in  satisfactory  condition  and  are  doing 
good  work.  His  example  is  well  worth 
following. 

VACATION  BY  CHANGE  OF  WORK 

"  W'e  keep  two  horses  for  this  business;  and 
while  one  of  them  works  in  the  city,  the  other  pulls 
a  light  buckboard  about  our  dairy  farm  and  comes 
in  for  plenty  of  green  feed.  They  exchange  jobs 
and  rations  from  time  to  time,  with  good  results." 

Many  users  of  city  horses  could  make  a 
good  profit  on  a  properly  organized  farm, 
keeping  part  of  the  horses  there  at  a  time 
until  the  whole  band  had  been  rested  and 
freshened  up  by  vacation  and  change  of 
work.  The  average  endurance  of  city  life 
by  the  horses  would  be  lengthened,  and  one 
and  all  would  accomplish  far  more  work 
with  infinitely  less  suffering. 

There  would  be  a  home  market  in  the 
city  stables  for  all  surplus  feed;  and  if  the 
distance  were  not  too  great,  the  out-going 
teams  could  haul  manure,  while  the  horses 
coming  to  town  could  bring  in  green  food 
and  other  supplies  in  season.  The  right 
kind  of  a  timber  lot  would  furnish  quan- 
tities of  leaves  which  make  good  bedding 
and  excellent  fertilizing  material.  By  this 
system  the  cost  of  the  horse-suppl\-  could 
be  lowered  greatly. 

A  HORSE-BOARDING  FARM 

Situated  twenty  miles  from  Boston: 

"  We  raise  hay  and  carrots;  also  corn,  which  we 
feed  green  and  on  the  cob.  During  the  hot  months 
the  horses  are  turned  out  at  night,  and  brought  in 
and  fed  in  the  daytime.  Mean  horses  are  always 
kept  away  from  the  others;  and  we  have  an  ex- 
ercise rink  for  use  in  l^ad  weather. 


11:3 


"  Notic-c  of  the  taking  away  of  a  horse  is  very 
important,  in  order  that  plenty  of  exercise  may  be 
given  before  real  work  begins.  We  send  for  and 
deliver  all  horses  that  romc  to  us." 


Many  suburban  farms  arc  naturally 
well-adapted  to  the  care  of  horses  that  are 
on  vacation,  and  great  soil-gain  must 
come  from  feeding  the  farm  products  on 
the  farm  itself.  It  is  an  every-day  prac- 
tice in  the  Middle  West  to  purchase  and 
feed  stock  for  the  sake  of  the  by-product 
thereby  realized  in  fertilizing  material. 
The  change  that  comes  over  properly 
pastured  fields  is  easily  seen.  Soil  that 
has  become  barren  through  over-cropping, 
or  that  is  drunk  with  the  unnatural  stim- 
ulus of  artificial  fertilizing  soon  shows 
a   great    improvement. 

THE   OHIO   PLAN 

Ohio's  output  of  good  things  is  not  con- 
fined to  presidents  and  generals.  The 
first  organized  campaign  for  promoting 
vacations  for  horses  was  started  by  the 
Ohio  Humane  Society  in  Cincinnati  in 
June,  1908.  Letters  explaining  the  sub- 
ject were  sent  at  that  time  to  many  business 
men  and  merchants  of  the  city,  who  re- 
sponded promptly.  Similar  letters  were 
sent  out  in  1909  and  1910;  and  the  Society 
reports  that  the  horse-vacation  habit  is 
well  established  in  Cincinnati. 

Requests  were  also  made  for  the  placing 
of  special  appeals  for  the  benefit  ot  horses 
on  the  various  letter-heads  and  circulars 
issued  by  dilTerent  firms  and  corpora- 
tions. Here  is  a  sample,  which  appeared 
on  many  thousand  copies  of  circulars,  etc.: 


A   SQUARE  DEAL  FOR 
THE  HORSE 

We  believe  every  horse  de- 
serves three  ample  meals  daily ; 
water  frequently;  proper  shoes; 
a  blanket  in  cold  weather;  two 
weeks'  vacation  annually. 

THROW  AWAY  THE  WHIP 


VACATIONS    FOR    POOR 
MEN'S    HORSES 

A  PROBLEM 

(Extract  from  a  letter  from  the  Ohio 
Humane  Society.) 

"  A  difficult  problem  in  this  vacation 
work  is  that  of  the  poor  owner  of  a  horse 
who  earns  a  living  for  a  family  by  running 
an  express  wagon  or  peddling.  As  a  rule, 
he  is  too  poor  to  grant  the  horse  a  vaca- 
tion; but  we  hope  to  provide  for  him 
later." 

The  same  problem  confronts  everyone 
who  tries  to  help  in  this  direction.  The 
only  way  to  meet  the  situation  seems  to 
be  to  provide  some  good  "second-hand" 
horses  that  may  be  lent — under  reasonable 
and  proper  restrictions — as  substitutes 
for  the  horses  that  need  rest. 

Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses, 
at  Stow,  twenty-five  miles  from  Boston, 
has  numerous  reconstructed  horses  that 
it  lends  to  people  in  that  neighborhood, 
w^here  they  can  frequently  be  inspected 
by  the  agents  of  the  Farm.  The  Farm  has 
no  horses  for  lending  to  city  owners;  but 
it  is  always  ready  to  give  free  rest  and 
treatment  to  the  horses  of  poor  men. 

A  horse  may  be  sent  by  anybody  at 
any  time  to  Red  Acre  Farm,  with  or 
without  notice,  and  he  will  be  cared  for. 
This  Association  acts  as  the  Boston  Agent 
of  the  Farm. 

Pine  Ridge,  at  Dedham,  the  annex  of 
the  Animal  Rescue  League  (51  Carver 
Street,  Boston),  will  also  take  poor  men's 
horses,  free  of  charge,  for  a  vacation  and 
for  treatment.  Pine  Ridge  is  only  ten 
miles  from  the  city,  and  is  therefore  con- 
veniently situated  for  this  purpose. 


Copies  of  all  Bulletins  issued  by  this 
Association  may  be  had  free  on  application. 
The  Bulletins  thus  far  issued  are: — 

No.  1.  Watering  and  Bedding,  by  Gil- 
bert Tompkins. 

No.  2.  The  Disposal  of  Old  Horses, 
by  Henry  C.  Merwin. 

No.  3.  The  Motor-Wagon  and  the 
Work-Horse,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  4.  Vacations  for  Work-Horses,  by 
Gilbert  Tompkins  and  Henry  C.  Merwin. 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


Allslon  Ilaiul  Laundry  Company 6S 

American  Coal  Co 38 

American  (irocery  Co 70 

Animal  Rescue  League  Annex 96 

Apostolu  Brothers 72 

Atlantic  Works 92 

Atwood  &  McManus 92 


Babcock,  E.J 

Babcock,  F.  M. 

Badger,  E.  B.  &  Sons  Co 

Bain  Bros.  Co 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Limited, 

Bartlett,  A.  J 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co 


60 

38 

91 

56 

58 

42 

72 

Bay  State  Fuel  Co 48 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 68 

Bellevue  Hotel    66 

Berry,  C.  &  Co 78 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co  90 

Boston  Badge  Co 26 

Boston  Flag  Pole  Co 52 

Boston  Forge  Co 82 

Boston  Industrial  Home  84 

Boston  Transfer  Co 84 

Boston  Wine  «&  Spirit  Co ; 84 

Bowen.C 42 

Boyd,  Brockton  Transportation  Co 80 

Bradford,  John  A.  Coal  Co 92 

Brcck,  Joseph  &  Sons 82 

BrighamC.  &Co .• 86 

Brockway-Smith  Corp 

Bruno,  Filippo  &  Co ._ 46 

Buck,  C.  H.  &  Co ." 72 

Campbell,  Thomas 68 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co 32 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co 82 

City  Laundry  Co 24 

Clement,  \Y.  A 66 

Cobb,  W.  F.  &  Son 66 

Coiley,  J.  T 96 

Coleman  Brothers  62 

Commonwealth   Hospital 8i 

Connors,  John  T 96 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 88 

Dempsey,  P 66 

Dennett,  Erastus  &  Son 72 

Di  Napoli,  Pasquali 46 

Doherty  &  Daly  56 

Dorchester  Ice  Co 52 


Dover  Stamping  &  Manufacturing  Co 56 

Driscoll,  J.  C 34 

East  Boston  Gas  Co.  (Chelsea  Div.) 58 

Eastern  Storage  Co 82 

Eddy,  C.  F.  Co % 

Eldridge,  Baker  Co 60 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co 68 

Fells  Ice  Co 46 

Ferguson,  J.  G.  &  B.  S.  Co 48 

Forgie's,  James  Sons  76 

Fox,  Geo.  G.  Co 58 

Freedman,  I.  &  Co 42 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 38 


Gahm,  Joseph  &  Sons.. 
Gove,  Austin  &  Son,  Ir 


Higgins,  W.  J 46 

Houghton  &  Dutton  32 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co 38 

Hovey,  C.  F.  &  Co 64 

Hovey,  H.  A.  &  Co. 50 

Hoyt,  The  Co 86 

Huckins,  P.  S.  Co 80 

Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.   Corp 44 

Jordan  Marsh  Co 88 


Kelly  Peanut  Co. 
Kennett,  R.  A 


Leavitt,  P.  M 

Lemay,  A.  A 

Leuthy,  A.  &  Co 

Locke  Coal  Co 

London,  The  Harness  Co 

Lowney,  The  Walter  M.  Co 22 

Magee's  East  Boston  Express 46 

Maiden  Coal  Co 56 

Maiden  Electric  Co 64 

Marine  Towel  Supply  Co 52 

Marsh,  J.  A.  Coal  Co 92 

Merchants'  Towel  Supply  Co 70 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co 30 

Monarch  Typewriter  Company 28 

Moore,  F.  L.  Co 74 

Morss  &  Whyte,  The  Co 64 

McCall,  F.   H 

McCarthy,  F.  J.  &  Co 52 

McDowell,  Thomas  .42 

McEnany,  J.  W 50 


LIST   OF  ADVERTISERS   (Continued) 


McGreevey,  Joseph  74 

McKinnon.  William  F 72 

IMcOiicslcn,  George  C 62 

New  England  Confectionery  Co 70 

Newcomb,  J.  S.  cS:  Co <6 

Oak  Grove  Farm 32 

O'Brion,  Fulton  52 

O'Learv,  Denis  72 


Pierce,  S.  S.  Co 

Potter's  Garage  &  Stable  Co. 

Priest,  T.j 

_^Purcoxia,  The  Co. 


.18 


Quinby,  W.  -S.  Co. 


56 


Red  Acre  Farm 62  and  96 

Rescue  Mission,  The  Wood  &  Coal  Yard 86 

Reardon,  John  &  Sons  Co 66 

Revere  House  70 

Richardson.  J.  H 38 

Roessle,  The  Brewery   76 

Ross,  C.  B 70 

Rowe,  A.  A.  &  Son 86 

Russell,  W.  G.  &  H.  C 78 


Sansone,  A 

Schwalm,  John  

Scaverns  Piano  Action  Co. 
Shapleigh  Coffee  Co 


80 

42 

56 

56 

Shattuck  &  Jones 34 

Siegel,  Henry  Co 90 

Smith,  C.  B.  &  Bro .44 

Smith  D.   A 82 

Smith,  G.  W.  &  F.  Iron  Co 80 


^niilh.  J.  H 86 

Snow,  Wheeler,  McElveen  &  Cavanagh 

Horse  Co 78 

Star  Brewing  Co 60 

Stetson  Coal  Co , 44 

Stone,  W.  P.  «&  Co 38 

Sturtevant  &   Haley 38 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co 94 

Sullivan,  J.  H.  Co 82 

Talbot,  J.  C 34 

Tassinari,  V.  &  Co.  52 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry,  Inc.  54 

Tighe,  J.  T.  &  Co '. 78 

Timberlake  &  Small.. 68 

Tingley,  W.  J 82 

Tisdale,  Wilson  Co 88 

Trimount   Laundry 50 

Union  Glass  Co 50 

Union  Ice  Co 80 

Union  Steam  Sponging  Works 68 

United   Basket  Co 40 

Watts,  James  H 66 

Waterhouse,   L.   A 46 

Webster  Charcoal   Co ,....52 

Wellington-Wild  Coal  Co 34 

White,  R.  H.  Co 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 20 

Whitney,  John  W 78 

Woodberry,  D.  S.  &  Co :..50 

Woods,  John  M.&  Co 5i 

Wright,  John 74 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 52 


IIG 


# 


LAJJ^ 


BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


1912 


/7^        't 


CATALOGUE 


Boston  Work-Horse  Parade 
Association 


(INCORPORATED) 


TENTH   ANNUAL   PARADE 


May  3oth,  19 12 


DIRECTORS 


HENRY  C.   MERVVIN,   President, 

State  House,  Room  356. 

ARTHUR    PERRIN,  Vice-President,  FRANCIS   PEABODY,  Jr.,  Vice-President, 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline.  Devonshire  Building. 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD,  Secretary, 

101  Milk  Street. 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3rd,  Treasurer, 

City  Hall. 

GEORGE    W.  HARRINGTON,  Mattapoisett. 

JOHN    H.  JEWETT,  161  High  Street. 

W.  D.  QUIMBY,  79   Portland   Street. 

DR.  F.  H.  ROWLEY,  Pres.  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  45  Milk  Street. 
G.  F.  STEBBINS,  12  Pearl  Street. 


AGENTS 


A.  G.   MERWIN,  General  Agent, 
15  Beacon  Street. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Special  Agent, 
42   Mt.  Vernon  Street,   Boston 

JAMES    MEREDITH,  Inspector, 
208   Everett   Street,   East   Boston. 


OFFICE 

(OPEN  THROUGHOUT  THE  YEAR   EXCEPT  IN  AUGUST) 

15  BEACON  STREET,  ROOM  27 

TELEPHONE,  HAYMARKET  228 


WORK-HORSE    PARADES 


HE  Work-Horse  Parade  originated  in  England,  and  for 
many  years  it  has  been  an  annual  event  in   London 
and  Liverpool.     The  first  Parade  of  the  kind  on  this 
continent  was  held  in  Boston  on  Memorial  Day,  May  30, 
1903,  by  ten  or  twelve  men  who  had  previously  been 
unacquainted  with  one  another,  but  who  were  drawn 
together  by  their  interest  in  horses, — especially  in  the 
ill-treated  horse.     Soon  afterward  they  were  incorpo- 
rated under  the  name  of  the  "  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association;" 
and  we  beg  that  all  humane  persons  who  have  property  to  dispose  of  will 
bear  this  title  in  mind. 

The  Association  has  no  endowment  whatever,  and  the  difficulty  in 
raising  the  money  necessary  to  carry  out  the  Parade  is  very  great.  Several 
of  the  Directors  devote  to  it  far  more  time  and  energy  than  they  can  afford 
to  expend,  outside  of  their  regular  occupation;  and  the  want  of  funds  is 
a  continual  source  of  anxiety.  Every  year  the  Parade  increases  in  size 
and  consequently  in  expense,  and  the  very  success  of  the  Association  seems 
likely  to  prove  its  ruin.  It  is  only  through  the  great  generosity  of  a  few 
men  and  w^omen,  among  w^hom  are  the  wddow  and  relatives  of  the  late 
R.  A.  Lawrence,  the  founder  and  first  President  of  the  Association,  that 
the  Parade  has  been  maintained  for  the  past  few  years. 

The  Parade-idea  is  gradually  extending  over  the  continent,  and,  in 
every  case,  so  far  as  we  know,  the  Boston  Parade  has  served  as  a  model. 
This  is  true  of  New  York,  Philadelphia,  Baltimore,  Chicago,  Buffalo,  Bur- 
lington (Iowa),  New  Orleans,  Minneapolis,  Seattle,  Tacoma,  San  Francisco 
and  Oakland,  Muskegon  (Mich.),  Hanover  (N.  H.),  Nashua  (N.  H.), 
Waltham    (Mass.),   Toronto    and    Halifax. 

It  gives  us  the  greatest  pleasure  to  send  copies  of  our  circulars,  cata- 
logues, instructions  to  judges,  and  other  documents  to  any  society  or  person 
who  contemplates  the  holding  of  a  Parade;  and  all  persons  are  at  liberty  to 
reprint  and  publish  the  circulars  and  Bulletins  issued  by  this  Association. 
In  particular  cases,  we  shall  be  glad  to  furnish  information  and  advice  by 
personal  letters  or  interviews.  We  have  a  collection  of  slides  for  a  stere- 
opticon  display  of  pictures  of  work-horses  and  other  horses,  and  we  are 
happy  to  lend  these  to  any  association  or  person  desiring  to  use  them. 


THE  PARADE  NOT  A  RICH  MAN'S  SHOW 

In  our  Parade  every  effort  is  made  to  reach  and  benefit  the  poor  man 
and  the  poor  man's  horse.  In  all  classes,  except  the  championship  classes, 
age  counts  in  favor  of  the  horse.  The  older  the  horse  the  higher  he  is 
graded,  provided  that  his  condition  is  good;  and  neither  l)lindness  nor 
blemishes  disqualif\-  him.  The  most  interesting  part  of  the  Parade  is  the 
Old  Horse  Class,  and  that  is  distinctly  the  poor  man's  opportunity.  The 
highest  honors  in  our  Parade  are  the  two  gold  medals, — the  Lawrence 
medal  for  four-horse  teams,  cared  for  by  the  driver,  and  the  gold  medal  for 
the  best  old  horse.  This  last  prize  has  been  offered  eight  times;  five  times 
it  was  taken  by  a  man  who  owned  only  the  single  horse  which  he  exhibited ; 
and  once  it  was  taken  by  a  man  who  owned  only  two  horses. 

Moreover,  in  the  classes  where  horses  are  most  apt  to  be  owned  by 
poor  men  we  offer  many  special  prizes  of  money  and  street  l)lankets. 
These  are  the  huckster,  barrel-rack  and  local  express  classes. 

The  Old  Horse  Class  was  originated  by  this  Association,  and  it  has 
been  a  success  wherever  tried, — not  only  in  Work-Horse  Parades,  but  at 
Cattle  Shows  and  County  Fairs.  We  earnestly  recommend  this  class  to 
the  managers  of  Horse  Shows  and  Fairs  throughout  the  country. 

Another  novelty,  tried  with  great  success  last  year,  is  the  class  for 
Reconstructed  Horses,  that  is,  horses  that  were  run  down  by  neglect 
or  ill-usage  and  have  been  restored  to  health  and  strength  by  a  new  owner. 

OUR   AGENTS 

Whenever  our  funds  are  sufficient,  we  employ  an  agent  to  go  about 
among  the  poorer  classes  of  stables,  especially  on  Sundays,  when  the 
horses  are  all  in  the  stable.  In  this  way  we  assist  the  owners  with  advice, 
medicine  and  other  means.  Much  good  is  accomplished  in  this  manner. 
Men  who  treat  their  horses  with  cruelty  are  warned,  and  in  extreme  cases 
suitable  action  is  taken.  We  earnestly  ask  for  contributions  in  order  that 
we  may  carry  on  this  work  during  the  coming  summer. 

THE  EQUINE  SHOWER  BATH 

Last  year  during  the  excessively  hot  weather  this  Association  main- 
tained eight  showering  stations  where  horses  were  showered  with  water 
from  hose  attached  to  a  hydrant  or  were  sponged  off  by  means  of  water 
pails  and  sponges.  These  stations  were  at  Upham's  Corner,  Copley  Square, 
Park  Square,  Charles  St.,  Cambridge  St.,  Minot  St.,  Scollay  Square,  and 
Dock  Square.     We  are  indebted  to  the  following  persons  and  corporations 

4 


for  the  free  use  of  their  water  and  hose,  and,  in  behalf  of  the  horses,  we 
most  earnestly  thank  them: — the  Pilgrim  Congregational  Church;  the 
Franklin  Savings  Bank,  M.  F.  Hanson,  the  Boston  Wine  and  Spirit  Com- 
pany, the  Oriental  Tea  Company.  Thousands  of  animals  were  refreshed 
in  this  manner,  and  often  a  long  line  of  panting  horses,  exhausted  by  the 
heat,  were  waiting  their  turn. 

This  showering  service  will  be  continued  in  the  current  year  on  any 
days  when  the  thermometer  is  85°  or  over,  provided  that  we  have  money 
enough  on  hand  for  the  purpose. 

MEETINGS  FOR  DRIVERS 

Two  "Smoke  Talks"  for  drivers,  stablemen  and  all  other  persons 
interested  in  horses  were  held  in  Kingsley  Hall  in  February,  1912,  at  which 
addresses  were  made  by  Dr.  Rowley  and  Mr.  W.  D.  Quimby,  and  stere- 
opticon  pictures  of  horses  were  shown  and  explained  by  the  President  of 
the  Association.  These  meetings  had  large  and  enthusiastic  audiences. 
The  same  entertainment  was  given  at  Waltham  in  May  of  this  year,  under 
the  auspices  of  the  Animal  Aid  Society.  We  assisted  the  same  society  in 
holding  a  very  successful  Work-Horse  Parade  in  Waltham  on  April  19,  1912. 

RED  ACRE  FARM  AND  PINE  RIDGE 

We  act  as  agents  for  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses  at  Stow, 
and  inquiries  about  the  Farm,  and  how  horses  can  be  sent  there,  will  be 
answered  at  any  time  by  letter  or  telephone.  Any  horse  which  is  a  subject 
for  charity  may  be  sent  to  the  Farm  by  anybody,  at  any  time,  without 
notice;  and  the  animal  will  be  cared  for.  The  post-office  address  of  the 
Farm  is  South  Acton,  Mass.  The  railroad  station  is  South  Acton.  The 
telephone  is  West  Acton  8. 

Under  the  laws  of  Massachusetts  (Chap.  133  of  the  Acts  of  the  year 
1908)  cities  and  towns  may  turn  over  their  old  or  disabled  horses  to  Red 
Acre  Farm,  or  to  any  other  incorporated  societ}'  for  the  relief  of  dumb 
animals.  Boston,  Somerville,  Brookline,  Waltham  and  other  municipalities 
have  availed  themselves  of  this  law,  instead  of  selling  the  animals  at  auction. 

Pine  Ridge,  the  annex  at  Dedham  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League,  is 
ready  at  any  time  to  receive  horses  that  need  rest  or  treatment.  Appli- 
cation should  be  made  to  the  League  at  51  Carver  Street,  Boston.  Pine 
Ridge  is  onh-  10  miles  out,  and  is  thus  a  convenient  place  in  which  to  give 
horses  a  vacation. 

There  is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  community  that  old  and  worn-out 

5 


or  painfully  lame  horses  ought  not  to  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  other- 
wise disposed  of  in  a  humane  manner.  To  sell  a  worn-out  horse,  and  thus 
eonsign  him  to  a  slow  and  ])ainful  death,  will  be  looked  upon  years  hence 
as  an  almost  incredible  cruelt\'. 

BULLETINS 

The  Association  issued  in  1910  a  Bulletin  on  Watering  and  Bedding, 
by  Gilbert  Tompkins.  This  Bulletin  has  been  widely  read  and  highly 
commended.  A  revised  edition  was  published  last  August,  and  it  is  now 
reprinted,  with  some  additions,  at  the  end  of  this  catalogue,  where  will  be 
found  also  a  Bulletin  on  X'acations  for  Work-Horses.  We  believe  it  to  be  a 
fact  that  an  annual  vacation  for  the  work-horse,  and  especially  for  the  old 
work-horse,  is  a  matter  not  only  of  humanity,  but  of  economy. 

Since  September,  1911,  we  have  printed  and  distributed  over  6,000 
Bulletins. 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins  issued  by  this  Association  may  be  had  free 
on  application.     The  Bulletins  thus  far  issued  are: — 

No.  1.     Watering  and  Bedding,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  2.     The  Disposal  of  Old  Horses,  by  Henry  C.  Merwin. 

No.  3.     The  Motor- Wagon  and  the  Work-Horse,  by  Gilbert  Tomj^kins. 

No.  4.  Vacations  for  Work-Horses,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins  and  Henry 
C.  Merwin. 

No.  5.  A  Bulletin  on  the  Feeding  of  Work-Horses,  by  Gilbert 
Tompkins,  will  be  published  about  the  first  of  July. 

THE  STABLE  INSPECTION 

The  most  important  activity  of  this  Association,  next  to  the  Parade, 
and  perhaps  not  second  to  that,  is  the  system  of  Stable  Inspection. 

Entries  for  this  may  be  made  at  any  time,  and  by  stables  of  all  kinds, 
including  livery,  hack,  and  boarding  stables.  There  is  no  entry  fee.  The 
stables  are  judged,  not  in  competition  with  one  another,  but  accordingly 
as  they  satisfy  the  standard  fixed  by  the  Association.  The  prizes  are  un- 
limited in  number,  and  consist  mainly  of  silver  medals,  awarded  to  the 
proprietors  and  to  foremen  and  nightmen.  The  stables  and  the  foremen 
are  not  always  graded  alike.  Sometimes  a  foreman  makes  poor  use  ot  the 
facilities  at  his  command,  and,  more  often,  a  good  foreman  has  to  struggle 
against  poor  facilities  and  bad  drivers.  The  Inspectors  are  the  most 
expert  and  impartial  men  that  we  can  find  in  Boston  or  elsewhere.  Their 
reports  are  confidential,  and  are  conmiunicated  onh'  to  the  pr()j)rietor  ot 
the  stable. 

6 


Among  the  points  considered  by  the  InsjDectors  are  quaHty  and  quantity 
of  hay  and  grain,  watering,  bedding,  blanketing,  grooming,  ventilation, 
stalls,  sanitary  condition  of  stable,  and  the  handling  of  the  horses  by  grooms 
and   drivers. 

The  stable  inspection  is  availed  of  more  and  more  every  year,  espe- 
cially by  large  concerns.  The  total  number  of  horses  in  the  stables  in- 
spected during  the  past  two  years  is  five  thousand,  four  hundred  and  forty. 

Many  large  concerns,  especially  corporations,  leave  their  stable  man- 
agement wholly  to  subordinates,  and  often  do  not  know  whether  it  is  good 
or  bad,  or  how  it  could  be  improved.  There  are  men  working  alone  at 
night  in  large  stables,  old  employees  in  many  cases,  as  to  whom  the  question 
is  never  asked  whether  they  do  their  work  well  or  ill.  Most  of  these  men 
are  faithful.  A  few  of  them  have  been  unearthed  by  our  Stable  Inspectors, 
and  it  is  pathetic  to  see  how  pleased  and  surprised  they  are  to  find  that  any 
human  being  takes  an  interest  in  them  or  in  their  work. 

No  amount  of  system  can  compensate  for  the  want  of  this 
personal  interest  in  the  horses  and  in  the  men  who  take  care  of 
them.  It  should  be  the  business  of  some  person  in  authority  in  every 
concern  to  know  how^  the  horses  look  and  feel,  whether  the  men  in  charge 
are  faithful  or  not,  how'  long  they  have  been  in  the  service,  what  sugges- 
tions they  have  to  make,  and  so  forth.  It  seems  to  be  the  policy  of  many 
large  corporations  and  firms  to  treat  men  and  horses  alike  as  if  they  were 
machines.     This  is  not  good  "  business,"  to  say  nothing  of  humanity. 

FAULTS  IN  STABLES 

Our  Inspectors  have  found  the  most  common  faults  in  Work-Horse 
stables  to  be  as  follows: — 

(1)  Scanty  bedding. 

(2)  Failure  to  bed  the  horses  on  Sundays  and  holidays  in  the  daytime. 

(3)  Failure  to  water  the  horses  at  night  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay. 

(4)  Failure  to  keep  the  horses'  feet  soft. 

(5)  Poor  grooming. 


STABLE  INSPECTION  REPORT 

The  following  is  a  copy  of  the  ]jrinted  form  for  the  Inspector's  report: — 
The  Inspectors  are  requested  to  re]3ort  on  the  following  matters  and 
any  others  that  ma\-  occur  to  them:^ — 

1.      How  the  horses  are  brought   to  the  stable   by  the  drivers,  whether  in 
a  heated  condition  or  nor. 

7 


2.  Manners  and  appearance  of  the  horses,  as  showing  whether  they  have 
been  handled  kindly  or  roughly. 

3.  Bodily  condition  of  horses. 

4.  Condition  of  horses'  feet. 

5.  Are  the  horses  well  groomed  ? 

6.  Examine  the  horses  for  galls  or  other  sores,  and  state  how  many,  if  any, 
are  galled. 

7.  Is  the   harness  clean  and  well  oiled  ;   and  especially  are  the  insides  of 
the  collars  clean  ? 

8.  Ventilation  of  stable  and  hay  loft. 

9.  Cleanliness  of  stable,  hay  loft  and  watering  troughs. 

10.  Drainage,  and  disposal  of  manure. 

11.  Temperature  of  stable,  and  whether  the  horses  are  subjected  to  draughts 
or  not. 

12.  Size  and  character  of  stalls — width  and  length. 

13.  Amount  of  bedding  ;  and  are  the  horses  bedded  during  the  day  on  Sun- 
days, and  when  they  stand  in  the  stable  on  other  days? 

14.  Hours  of  feeding  and  watering;   and  especially  are  the  horses  watered 
after  eating  their  hay  at  night  ? 

15.  Quality  and  amount  of  hay  and  grain  fed. 

16.  Bran  mash, — when  given. 

17.  Salt,  when  and  how  given. 

18.  Blanketing  of  horses  in  stable. 

19.  (In  large  stables)  is  there  a  drying  room  for  blankets  ? 

20.  Are  there  rain-covers  for  the  horses,  or  two  sets  of  blankets — one  for 
wet  weather? 

larks :' ' 


Signature  of  Inspector. 
Date 


For  the  prizes  awarded   this  year  to   stables  and  stablemen  see  the 
pages  at  the  end  of  the  entry  list. 

The  Association   is   indebted   to  the   following   Stable   Inspectors  for 
their  very  careful  and  conscientious  work: — 

E.    F.    COLDWELL  ROBERT    MASON 

J.   B.    MATTHEWS  J.  W.  Whitney 


TENTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1912 


'NY  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  or  out 
of  condition  will  be  disqualified. 

Every  entry  not  disqualified  will  receive  a^ribbon, 
either  first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow).     In  the 
Old  Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons  are  awarded, 
which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other  classes. 
Each  blue  ribbon  winner  wall  receive  a  brass  medal  to  be  worn  as  a 
permanent  ornament  on  the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be 
aAvarded.  The  Judges  may  aw^ard  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  de- 
served, subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(1)  Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green  horses, 
and,  if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any  horse, 
unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type  and 
good  quality.* 

MANNERS 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the  horse  has 
been  treated  kindly, 

COLOR 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 

BLINDNESS 

A  blind  horse  is  not  disqualified. 

THE  VEHICLE 

The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry  or  reduce  the 
grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 


For  what  is  meant  by  quality,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  catalogue. 

9 


THE   HARNESS 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count  ;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especially  in  the 
collar,   counts   against   the   entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by  reason 
of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in  the 
harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  and  inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of 
pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of  it, 
is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in  respect 
to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required.  Brass 
frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments  should  not 
be  used. 

Housings  for  collars,  except  for  use  in  rain-storms,  are  strongly  disapproved 
by  the  Association  as  being  unnecessary,  expensive  and  adding  to  the  weight  of 
the  harness. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association,  and  shown  in  a  photo- 
graph printed  in  this  catalogue,  weighs  only  53  pounds,  collar  and  all,  and  it  is 
big  enough  for  any  1350-pound  horse.  Horses  of  that  weight  frequently  carry 
a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The  bridle  shown  in  the  photograph 
weighs  less  than  two  pounds — about  half  liit  usual  weight. 

DRIVERS'   BADGES 

A  medal  or  badge,  to  be  worn  on  the  person,  will  be  given  to  every  driver 
who  shows  in  the  Parade,  in  good  condition  and  serviceably  sound,  the  same 
horse  or  horses  shown  by  him  in  the  Parade  of  the  year  before.  (In  case  of 
four-horse  teams,  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  were  shown  by  him 
the  previous  year.) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  driver,  all  things  con- 
sidered ;   and  silver  badges  will  be  given  to  the  twenty  who  rank   next.* 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  be  ambitious  to  obtain 
one  of  these  badges,  and  that  possession  of  the  badge  will  be  the  best  recom- 
mendation that  a  driver  could  have. 

SPECIAL  PRIZES 

In  memory  of  R.  A.  Lawrence,  its  first  President,  the  Association 
offers  a  gold  medal  to  the  owner  and  a  silver  medal  to  the  driver,  for  the 

*The  following  gold  and  silver  badges  were  awarded  in  1912: 

Gold  badges:  I'hilip  11.  Boyd,  Michel  Devereaux. 

Silver  badges:  William  Argy,  Henry  K .  Barnard,  Thomas  Barry,  John  J.  Brady,  Edgar  N.  Bryson, 
William  II.  Bryson,  Michael  Burke,  Remus  Burt,  T.  B.  Cheever,  Robert  Coulter,  Elvvood  Demeritt,  H.  L. 
Fallon,  George  C.  Lienhard,  William  T.  Lockney,  William  Lonergan,  John  W.  Luzzatto,  Oliver  H.  Marion, 
Harrv  Martell,  Xyron  R.  Merritield,  Joseph  A.  McDonald,  Alexander  McLane,  Timothy  J.  O'Connor,  Edward 
Riley,  Nathan  P.  Teague,  William  Vaughn,  Kred    E.  W  eir. 

10 


1 


best  four-horse  team  in  the   Parade,   provided  also  that  the  driver  takes 
care  of  his  horses.       There  are  second  and  third  prizes  in  this  Class. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums 
of  money,  are  offered  in  the  \eteran  Driver,  Old  Horse  and  other  classes 
by  the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals,  American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Rescue 
League,  Red  Acre  Farm,  Mrs.  A.  E.  Dwight,  Mrs.  A.  G.  Merwin,  Mrs. 
Jacob  Hittinger,  John  W.  Whitney,  W.  D.  Quimby,  George  W.  Harrington, 
Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon,  Dr.  D.  P.  Keogh,  James  Forgie's  Sons.  These  will  be 
found  specified  in  the  Entry  List  below. 

DRIVING  COMPETITION 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four-horse  teams  will  be  held  in  or  near 
Commonwealth  Avenue,  while  the  judging  is  taking  place.  Entries  for 
this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first  prize  will  be 
a  silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 


U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  w^ho 
have  horses;  of  these  there  are  about  thirty-five.  Their  yearly  allowance 
for  providing  and  maintaining  a  horse  and  wagon  is  only  $350.  This 
sum  is  very  inadequate.  The  men  do  their  best,  but  their  horses  and 
wagons  make  a  poor  showing.  Only  one  has  made  an  entry  in  the  Parade 
of  1912. 

NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing-stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing-stand 
at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclosed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  alwa>s  a])parenl,  treciuently 
exclude  a  fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 
rnd  that  green  horses  are  disc-riminated  against. 

11 


SYSTEM  OF  JUDGING 

Those  classes  in  which  special  prizes  are  awarded,  namely,  Fire  De- 
partments, Old  Horses,  Reconstructed  Horses,  Four-Horse  Teams,  Owners 
and  Foremen's  Runabout  Horses,  Barrel-Racks,  Hucksters,  Local  Expresses, 
and  the  five  Championship  classes,  will  be  judged  as  formerly,  that  is,  by 
two  Judges  for  each  class,  w^ho  will  inspect  the  horses,  and  see  them  move. 
The  other  classes,  comprising  about  four-fifths  of  the  Parade,  w^ill  be  judged 
by  one  set  of  Judges  in  the  following  manner: — 

As  soon  as  the  classes  are  in  order,  they  w^ill  start  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand,  w^ith  a  distance  of  twenty  feet  between  each  entry. 

Two  veterinarians  will  be  stationed  about  fifty  yards  down  the  line, 
and  the  horses  will  approach  them  at  a  slow  trot.  The  veterinarians 
will  inspect  the  horses  as  they  approach,  will  halt  them  if  necessary,  and 
will  shunt  off  from  the  line  any  that  are  lame. 

If  the  owner  or  driver  thinks  that  a  mistake  has  been  made,  he  may 
ask  the  veterinarians  to  test  his  horse  again,  and  in  that  case  the  veterin- 
arians will  give  the  horse  another  trial  later. 

Those  not  excluded  for  lameness  will  proceed  at  a  walk,  and  will  be 
judged  by  two  experts  stationed  fifty  yards  further  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand.  They  will  "  size  up  "  the  horses  as  they  approach,  will  halt  them 
for  a  moment,  if  necessary,  and  look  them  over,  and  w^ill  then  decide  on 
the  grade  of  ribbon  which  the  entry  is  to  receive, — or  w^ill  decide  that  the 
entry  is  to  receive  nothing;  and  their  decision,  without  announcing  it  to 
the  driver,  will  be  telephoned  by  an  assistant  to  the  reviewing-stand.  Each 
entry  carries  a  number  corresponding  with  the  number  in  the  catalogue, 
so  that  this  can  easily  be  done. 

This  plan  was  tried  last  year  and  worked  so  successfully  that  it  will  be 
adopted  again  this  year. 

NOTICE  TO  THE  PUBLIC 

Is  it  not  possible,  we  are  often  asked,  for  a  man  to  have  a  few  good- 
looking  horses  in  the  Parade,  while  at  home  he  has  five  or  ten  times  as 
many  in  poor  condition?  We  answer,  No.  We  reserve  the  right  to  inspect 
all  the  horses  in  the  stable  of  an  applicant  for  a  place  in  the  Parade;  and 
every  year  we  exclude  many  entries  on  the  ground  that  the  owner's  treat- 
ment of  his  horses  in  general  is  not  humane.  In  other  cases,  when  the  treat- 
ment of  the  owner's  horses  is  good  in  most  respects,  but  not  up  to  the 
standard  in  others,  we  request  the  owner  to  make  such  reforms  as  are 
needed;  and  it  is  very  seldom  that  he  refuses. 

12 


The  advertising  value  of  a  place  in  the  Parade  is  now  very  great, 
and  we  intend  that  no  inhumane  owner  of  a  horse  shall  have  the  benefit 
of   it. 

The  Public  may  take  the  presence  of  a  horse  in  this  Parade 
as  an  assurance  that  the  owner  is  a  humane  man  in  his  treatment 
of  horses  generally. 

Our  Judges  are  selected  upon  the  same  principle. 


THE   NUMBER   OF   FIRMS    REPRESENTED    IN   THE   PARADE 

1912     1911     1910     1909     1908     1907     1906     1905     1904     1903 


154 


TOTAL   NUMBER   OF   ENTRIES 


Year     1912     1911     1910     1909  1908     1907     1906     1905     1904     1903 

1048     1015      903      847  738      685      593      530      444      433 

PRIZES    AWARDED 

Year      1st      2d      3rd      4th  5th      H.  C.      Special      Totals 

1911      454      210      82       4  7        26        55         839 

1910      499      208      91       3  17        68         866 

1909      404      197      77       7  30        83         802 

1908      362      155      70       5  23        34         655 

1907      237      147      97      59  39        43         625 

1906      165      129      94      91  24        38         543 

PRIZES    TO  VETERAN    DRIVERS 

Year     1912     1911     1910     1909  1908     1907     1906 

29      36      38      37  19      23      24 

DRIVERS'  BADGES 

Year     1912     1911     1910     1909  1908     1907     1906 

332      327      288      190  394      505      366 


13 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE 


Horses  walked  on  starting  out  in  the 
morning,   and   after  the   noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and 
at  night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or 
if  the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar,  saddle  and 
crupper. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only, 
horses  wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge 
on  coming  in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing 
the  horse,  much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not 
much,  on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.      (In  any  case, 

watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay.  This  is 
especially  necessary  in  summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down    all   day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sun- 
day noon  ;  cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter. 
A  mash  twice  a  week  if  work  is  light. 

Horses  salted  in  the  bran  mash,  or  other- 
wise, with  regularity. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  gollars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie 
with  heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or  grated 
in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for 
the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all  —  Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morn- 
ing, and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing 
hard. 

Harness  stripped  ofif  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  clean- 
ing or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill, 
no  matter  how  hot  ;  or  not  watered  at 
all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating 
their  hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night,  and 
horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  —  too  much 
trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody  hap- 
pens to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean  ;  sweat  allowed  to  ac- 
cumulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway,  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up 
dirty. 

Stable  close — no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the  horses' 
heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  even- 
ing and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken  ;  doors  left  open  ;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot 
nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge; 
no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about  ;  general  atmosphere  of 
noise  and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out 
or  put  up,  nor  on  Sundaj'S. 


14 


HOT-WEATHER  RULES 


1.  I>oad  lightly,  and  drive  slowly. 

2.  Water  your  horse  as  often  as  possible,  but  let  him  drink  only  a  few  swallows  if 
he  is  going  to  stand  still. 

3.  So  long  as  a  horse  is  working,  water  in  moderate  quantities  will  not  hurt  him.  If 
watered  often,  he  will  not  drink  too  much  at  a  time. 

4.  When  he  comes  in  after  work,  sponge  off  the  harness  marks,  his  eyes,  his  nose 
and  mouth,  and  the  dock.      Wash  his  feet  but  not  his  legs. 

5.  If  the  thermometer  is  75  degrees  or  higher,  wipe  him  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge. 
Use  vinegar  water  if  possible.      Never  turn  the  hose  on  his  back  or  loins. 

6.  Saturday  night,  give  a  bran  mash,  cold  ;  and  in  very  hot  weather  add  a  tablespoon- 
ful  of  saltpetre. 

7.  Do  not  use  a  horse-hat,  unless  it  is  a  canopy-top  hat.  The  ordinary  bell-shaped 
hat  does  more  harm  than  good. 

8.  A  sponge  on  top  of  the  head,  or  even  a  cloth,  is  good  if  kept  wet.  If  dry  it  is 
worse  than  nothing. 

9.  If  the  horse  is  overcome  by  heat,  remove  harness  and  bridle,  wash  out  his  mouth, 
sponge  him  all  over,  shower  his  legs  and  give  him  four  ounces  of  aromatic  spirits  of 
ammonia,  or  two  ounces  of  sweet  spirits  of  nitre,  in  a  pint  of  water,  or  give  him  a  pint  of 
coi^ce  warm.  Cool  his  head  at  once,  using  cold  water,  or,  if  necessary,  chopped  ice, 
wrapped   in   a  cloth. 

10.  If  the  horse  is  ofi  his  feed,  try  him  with  two  quarts  of  oats  mixed  with  bran, 
and  a  little  water;  and  add  a  little  salt  or  sugar.  Or  give  him  oatmeal  gruel  or  barley 
water    to    drink. 

11.  Watch  your  horse.  If  he  stops  sweating  suddenly,  or  if  he  breathes  short  and 
quick,  or  if  his  ears  droop,  or  if  he  stands  with  his  legs  braced  sideways,  he  is  in  danger 
of  a  heat  or  sun  stroke  and  needs  attention  at  once. 


15 


WILLIAM    D.  QUIMBY 


ARTHUR    GILBERT  MERWIN  DR.  P.  J.  CRONON 


Cfjaplain 

THE   REV.  FREDERICK    M.  WHITE 


Francis  Peabody.Jr. 
Arthur  Perrin 
Joshua  Atwood,  3rd 
John  H.  Jewett 
James  I.  Brooks 

H.   J.    QuiMBY 


Dennis  Neyland 
William  J.  Brady 
William  Selby 
Robert  Mason 
Fred  L.  Jordan 
John  W.  Whitney 


Albert  B.  Lewis 
R.  D.  Carter 
Phillip  S.  Greeley 
Curt  P.  Freshel 
Clifford  G.  Miller 
George  Hicks 


G.  Burton  Milliman 


T.  Watts  Davies 


Robert  J.  Taylor 


©eterinarp  ansipector 

DR.  FRANK   J.  SULLIVAN 


U^\)tv^ 


A.  L.  Berry 


aubges; 


ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  J.   M. 

BAKER,  JAMES  E. 
BALK  AM,  DR.  R.  W. 
BARNES,  DR.  W.  E. 
BARTLETT,  W.   R. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BOLCiER,  DR.  D.  L. 
BRKiHAM,  W.  E. 
BUNKER,  DR.  MADISON 
BUTLER,  W.  L. 

CLEAVES,  DR. 
COLDWELL,  E.  F. 
COLE,  W.  K. 
COLLI NSON,  C.  M.  B. 
CULLEN,  DR.  DAVID 

DELANEY,  D.  J. 
DELANO,   DR    CHAS.  W. 
DEWS,   DR    HARRY 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 


DUMMER,  R.   G. 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 

FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 

GILLIGAN,  J.  T. 
GORDON,  JOHN 

HARDING,  R.  W. 
HARRINGTON,  GEO.  W. 
HARRISON,   CAPT.   RODEN 
HILL,  DR.  A.  G. 
HOFFMAN,   E.   H. 
HOLDEN,  C.   B. 
HUNT,  W.  D. 

KENNETT,  r.  a. 
KENNEY,  J.   R 

LANGLAN,  THOS. 

MACK.  THOMAS  W. 
MacWILLIAMS,  p.  T. 
MASON,  ROBERT 

16 


MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MAY,  DR.  A.  W. 
McMANUS,  H.  P. 
MEREDITH,  JAMES 
MERWIN,  A.  G 
MURRAY,  R.  H. 

OSGOOD,  DR.  F.  H. 

PERRY,  DR.  CHAS.  H. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 

ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,  J.  E. 
ROLLIN,   DR.  J.   H. 

SOUTHER,  DR.  H.  A. 
SULLIVAN,DR.  F.  J. 
SULLIVAN,  J.   H. 

WADSWORTH,  DR.   S.   F. 
WALKER,    FRED   F. 
WHITTEMORE,  W.   P. 


THE   FOLLOWING   DRIVERS   ACT   AS  AIDS 
IN  THEIR  RESPECTIVE  CLASSES 


I 


WILLIAM  GALLAGHER, 
SAMUEL  BLAIR, 
RALPH  ARMSTRONG, 
FRANK  T.  DALEY, 
PATRICK  HENNESSEY, 
M.  J.  SHEA, 
RICHARD  POWELL, 
WILLIAM  E.  DEN VI R, 
JOHN  BRONKHORST, 
FRED  DeCORSEY, 
J.  F.  HOWARD, 
WARREN  E.  DAVIS, 
JAMES  R.  BOYD, 
ELMER  V.  NEWTON, 
ALFRED  J.  GODDARD, 
PATRICK  E.  BURKE, 
EDWARD  J.  SWEENEY. 
JOSEPH  HARRIS, 
JOHN  A.  MOREHOUSE, 
DANIEL  SMIDDI, 
JOHN  HOWARD, 
GUILFORD  SAUNDERS, 
WILLIAM  MELLISH, 
JOSEPH  A.  LEACH, 
PATRICK  WELCH, 
LOUIS  H.  STEINBERG, 
JOHN  T.  KILDUFF, 
M.  J.  DEVEREAUX, 
G.  FRED  SEAMON, 
MAURICE  J.  FLYNN, 

CLAYTON  E.  EVERTON, 

CHARLES  G.  VAUGHN, 
WILLIAM  H.  BRYSON, 

WILLIAM   B.  SMITH, 
GEORGE  FARRELL, 
RALPH  B.  FAMES, 
WILLIAM  B.  LOUD, 
ROBERT  F.  ATWOOD, 
FRED  E.  WEIR, 
JOHN  A.  HANSON, 
(GEORGE  W.  YOUNKER, 
HERBERT  A.  LEA, 
WILLIAM  W.  THAYER, 
WILLIAM  D.  HIGGINS, 
WILLIAM  J.  COILEY, 
RALPH   E.  HARRINGTON, 
MARK  H.  SIMONDS, 


Public  Works  Departmenl. 

Public  Works  Department. 

Milk. 

Bakers. 

Laundry. 

Deliveries,  Newspapers. 

Deliveries,  Miscellaneous. 

Deliveries,  Department  Stores. 

Furniture  Makers  and  Movers. 

Provisions,  Light  Horses. 

Provisions,  Heavy  Horses. 

Confectioners. 

Grocers. 

Public  Service  Corporations. 

Oil  Dealers. 

Manufacturers. 

Builders  and  Building  INIaterial. 

Metals  and  Junk. 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers. 

Hay  and  Grain. 

Lumber. 

Ice. 

Contractors. 

Coke  and  Charcoal. 

Coal. 

Owners'    and    Foremen's    Runabouts. 

Truckmen. 

Lawrence    Gold    Medal   (Four-Horse    Teams). 

Championship,  Singles,  Light  Horses. 

Championship,      Singles,       Middleweight     or 

Wagon  Horses. 
Championship,      Doubles.      Middleweight     or 

Wagon  Horses 
Championship,  Singles,    Heavy   Horses. 
Championship,  Doubles  and  Upwards,  Heavy 

Horses. 
Old  Horses,  Division  A. 
Old  Horses,  Division  B. 
Old  Horses,  Division  C. 
Old  Horses,  Division  D. 
Old  Horses,  Division  E. 
Old  Horses,  Championship. 
Reconstructed  Horses. 
Barrel  Racks. 
Express,  Division  A. 
Express,  Division  B. 
Express,  Division  C. 
Hucksters,  Division  A. 
Hucksters,  Division  B. 
Hucksters.  Division  C. 


On  page  61,  entry  No.  353, 


ERRATUM 

Daniel  Leighton  should  read  Daniel  Singleton. 
17 


LIST  OF  CONTRIBUTORS 


A.  E.  D. 

A  Friend,  "  S." 

Agassiz,  R.  L. 

A  Lover  of  Animals 

Allen,  Miss  Sarah  M. 

American  Humane   Education 

Society 
Ames,  Mrs.  William  H. 
Angell,  Mrs.  George  T. 
Animal  Rescue  League 
Anonymous 

Bacon,  Miss  Louisa  C. 
Bacon,  Miss  M.  P. 
Bartlett,  Miss  Fannie 
Baylies,  Walter  C. 
Beebe,  E.  Pierson 
Blake,  Mrs.  Arthur  W. 
Blake,  Miss  Marion  L. 
Blake,  Mrs.  Mary  F. 
Bossert,  Miss  Annie 
Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 
Boston  Ice  Co. 
Brooks,  Fred 
Bryant,  Mrs.  E.  B. 
Burr,  Mrs.  H.  M. 

Cabot,  Mrs.  A.  T. 
Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 
Carr,  Samuel 
Carter's  Ink  Co. 
Chase,  Mrs.  Theodore 
Clapp,  Eugene  H. 
Clarke,  Eliot  C. 
Clarke,  Henry  Martyn 
Clarke,  Miss  Lillian  Freeman 
Crocker,  George  G. 
Cronon,  Dr.  P.  J. 
Cunningham,  Frederick 

Daland,  Tucker 
Davenport,  Mrs.  J.  Henry 
Deland,  Mrs.  Margaret 
Dempsey,  P.  &  Co. 
Dexter,  Gordon 
Dodd,  Miss  Ethel 


Eaton,  Miss  Harriett  L. 
Eaton,  Miss  Julia  F. 
Eaton,  Miss  Mary  S. 
E.  C.  J. 

Ki.sher,  Miss  Annie  E. 
Forbes,  J.  Murray 

Gilman,  O.  B. 
Goddard,  Miss  Julia 
Gowing,  Mrs.  E.  H. 
Greene,  Mrs.  Edwin  Farnuni 
Grew,  Edward  W. 

Hall,  George  G. 
Harrington,  George  W. 
Hayes,  Miss  Mary  H. 
Hittinger,  Mrs.  Jacob 
Hittinger,  Jacob 
Howe,  Mrs.  Albert 
Hudson,  Mrs.  John  E. 

lasigi.  Miss  Nora 

In  Memory  of  A.  K.'s  "  Puss 

Jarves,  Miss  Florence  A. 
Jordan,  F.  L. 

Keith,  B.  F. 

Kendall,  Miss  Georgiana 
Kennard,  Mrs.  C.  W. 
Kent,  Prentiss  M. 
Keogh,  Daniel  P.,  M.D.D. 
Kidder,  Charles  A. 

Lawrence,  Amory  A. 

Lawrence,  John 

Lawrence.  Madeline 

Lee,  Joseph 

L.  F. 

Loring,  Miss  Helen 

Loring,  Mrs.  Thacher 

Mackie,  Walter 
Manning,  Miss  Frances 
Marble,  Mrs.  A.  M. 
Marston,  R.  &  Co. 
Mason,  Miss  E.  F. 
Mason,  Miss  Ida 
Masters,  E.  C. 


Matthews,  Albert 
Maynard  Coffee  Co. 
Merwin,  Mrs.  A.  G. 
Mixter,  Miss  M.  C. 
Moors,  Mrs.  Francis  J. 
Morse,  Dr.  Henry  Lee 
Morse,  John  T.,  Jr. 
Moseley,  Miss  Ellen  F. 
M.  S.  P.  C.  A.  Society 

"Ormonde" 

Parker,  Mrs.  Charles  H. 
Parker,  Francis  S. 
Parsons,  The  Misses 
Peabody,  Phillip  G. 
Phillips,  Mrs.  John  C. 
Pickman,  Dudley  L. 
Pierce,  Mrs.  Myron  E. 
Putnam,  Miss  Sarah  G. 

Quimby,  W.  D. 

Rackemann,  Charles  S. 
Red  Acre  Farm 
Richardson,  Mrs.  Charles  F. 
Richardson,  Dr.  William  L. 
Rodman,  Miss  Emma 
Rollins,  Hon.  F.  W. 

Shattuck,  Dr.  George  B. 
Shaw,  Francis  ^ 

Shimmin,  Miss  Blanche 
Staniford,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Steele,  Miss  Carrie  B. 
Storer,  Mrs.  John  H. 
Sturgis,  Mrs.  Robert  S. 
Swift,  Henry  W. 

Tarbell,  A.  P. 
Thayer,  Mrs.  Ezra  R. 
Tyson,  Mrs.  George 

Ward,  Miss  Elizabeth  J. 
White,  R.  H.,  Co. 
Wiggles  worth,  George 
Williams,  Mrs.  Francis  H. 
Wood,  Miss  Annie  L. 
Worthington,  Miss  Julia  H. 

Young,  Mrs.  B.  L. 


Mrs.  R.  D.  Evans 


Mrs.  R.  A.  Lawrence 


Mrs.  B.  T.  Mc 


Mrs.  David  Nevins 


18 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in 
the  Parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer, 
or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  The  Association  gives  a  second  prize  of  five  dollars 
to  the  driver  with  the  second  longest  term,  and  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in 
this  class  (the  prize  winner  excepted)   whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


Years    of 
Service 


ARTHUR  GESWELL 
WILLIAM  T.  DUNBAR 
JOHN  B.  FAY 
WILLIAM  WALLACE 
WILLIAM  H.  LOVELESS 
JOHN  HOWARD 
TIMOTHY  J.  O'CONNOR 
WILLIAM  B.  SMITH 
JAMES  SPIKES 
JOHN  L.  SULLIVAN 
CHESTER  H.  MEADDOX 
WILLIAM  F.  MEESE 
CHARLES  S.  MOORE 
EDWARD  J.  TEW 
WILLIAM  B.  WEBB 
CHARLES  WHITE 
MICHAEL  BURKE 
JOHN  F.  CONNORS 
JOHN  J.  KILDUFF 
PATRICK  DONAHUE 


Lawrence  &  Wiggin 

20 

Atlantic  Works 

21 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

21 

Paine  Furniture  Co. 

22 

W.  E.  Loveless 

23 

Howard  Bros. 

24 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

24 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

24 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

24 

City  of  Boston  (Sanitary  Service) 

24 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

26 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

27 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

27 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

27 

H.  F.  Brackett  &  Co. 

27 

A.  F.  Carpenter 

27 

City  of  Boston  (Water  Dept.) 

28 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

28 

City  of  Boston 

28 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

29 

19 


"(^isa 


99 


Ceylon  Tea 

Pure  Rich  Fragrant 


I    LB. 
CANISTERS 
60  CENTS 

1-2   LB. 
CANISTERS 
35   CENTS 


Packed  in  Parchment-lined 
One  pound  and  half-pound  Canisters 

WE    INVITE    COMPARISON    WITH    OTHER    TEAS 
OF    THE    SAME    OR    HIGHER    PRICE 

S.  S.  PIERCE  CO. 


Tremont  and  Beacon  Streets 
Copley  Square 
CooUdgfe  Corner 


BOSTON 

BOSTON 

BROOKLINE 


20 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS— Continued 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


MICHAEL  CURRAN 
WILLIAM  E.  DENVIR 
THOMAS  H.  McMANUS 
ANDREW  BLAKE 
CHRISTOPHER  LORENSON 
PATRICK  A.  OUINN 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
S.  J.  RICHARDSON 
LOUIS  BRIER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


Years    of 
Service 


John  T.  Scully  Foundation  Co.  30 

C.  F.  Hovey  Co.  30 

Paine  Furniture  Co.  33 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  34 

Jenness  &  Co.  34 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co.  34 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  35 

City  Laundry  38 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  39 


The  Veteran  Driver's  Prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years;  in  1905,  by  Thomas  Haley,  an 
employee  of  the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.,  with  a  record  of  40  years;  and  a  medal  was 
also  given  to  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation  for  38  years. 
In  1906  the  medal  was  won  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.T.  &  A.  G.Van  Nostrand 
Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years;  in  1907  by  John  Francis  Kelley,  employed  by  R.  O. 
Brigham  for  42  years;  in  1908  by  Thomas  Colbert,  employed  by  Henry  Craft's  Sons,  and  by 
James  Holland,  employed  by  P.  O'Riorden  Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a  medal,  having 
each  served  for  a  term  of  43  years.  A  special  silver  medal  was  also  awarded  to  John 
Green  for  his  service  of  49  years  with  the  City  of  Boston.  In  1909  this  prize  was  won  by 
John  M.  Lee,  of  the  Boston  Ice  Co.,  with  a  record  of  52  years'  service.  In  1910  the  prize 
went  to  Henry  Knox,  who  had  driven  37  years  for  the  George  McQuesten  Lumber  Co. 
In  1911  the  medal  was  won  by  Louis  Brier,  driver  for  Jordan,  Marsh  Company,  with  a  term 
of  service  of  thirty-eight  years,  and  the  same  man  wins  the  prize  this  year. 


21 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 


Our  Laundry  Work 


COKPARY 

!IGTAr;(JSHi:i5 


'^ 


COLLECTIONS   MADE 

In  Roslindale,  Dorchester,  South  Boston,  Brookline, 
Nantasket,  Back  Bay  and  City 


TELEPHONE,    ROXBURY    283 


CITY  LAUNDRY  CO. 

82  to  98  West  Lenox  Street 


22 


CLASSES 


CLASS  1— FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 


The  Judges  may  award  a  first  and  second  prize  in  this  class  and  as  many  "  Highly 
Commended  "    ribbons    as    may    be    deserved. 

The  first  and  second  prizes  are  a  silver  and  a  bronze  medal,  contributed  by  Dr,  D.  P, 
Keogh,  the  veterinary  surgeon  of  the  Fire  Department  of  the  City  of  Boston. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

No.  of 
Horses 

1 

City  of  Boston 
(Chief's  Horse) 

Wm.  H.  Lanigan 

Duke 

1 

2 

City  of  Boston 
(Engine  27) 

Chas.  F.  O'Brien 

Patrick  and 
Davie 

2 

3 

City  of  Boston 
(Chemical  8) 

John  M.  Devine 

Frank  and 
Major 

2 

4 

City  of  Boston 
(Engine  26) 

Francis  P.  Kennedy 

Smoky, 
Tickle  and 
Jerry 

3 

5 

City  of  Boston 
(Engine  39) 

*John  Ryan 

Tom,  Dick 
and  Harry 

3 

GLASS  2— U.  S.   LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Five  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


William  George 


William  George 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


23 


IHH     HOMI£     OF 


3HO£ 


$3.50  to  $5.00 


I'liis  ii)lossal  tiU"Ii>i\  cmpIoNs  nunc  people  tluin  the  pupiil.itiiui  ot  the 
;i\  t"i;i|.'.e  town.  A  eomimmit  \  m  ilselt  I  ,/'lH)  empK>\  ee>,.  I'hmk.  nt  it  !  Tliese 
lur  ti(MneniK)Us  finurrs,  hul  (his  is  a  (i fmrmloiis  luisiness  ilte  hi^j'.est  in  ilie 
woiM  protliuinn  vvoiurn's  shoes  fxehisivrK  . 

"Ourrn  (,>ualilv  "  Shoes  lit  wheie  otheis  tail.  Ihev  aie  the  eonsum 
nmtit)n  ot  rveivthini;  ilesirahlc  in  women's  lootweai.  In  all  shapes,  all  leatheis 
i>n»l  III!  tashionahle  lahiiis. 

THOMAS    G,  PLANT   COMPANY 

BOSTON.  MASS. 


Sold   ill    Boston   b 


James  A*  Houston  Company 


CITY  OF  BOSTON 
CLASS  3— PARK  DEPARTMENT 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

7 

Park  Department 

John  CoughHn 

2 

8 

James  J.  Melynn 

2 

9 

John  Morrissey 

10 

James  J.  O'Brion 

11 

Michael  J.  Murray 

12 

James  T.  Durley 

13 

Joseph  B.  Fallon 

14 

Michael  Connors 

2 

15 

Bernard  J.  Fay 

.    2 

16 

Patrick  Daley 

2 

CITY  OF  BOSTON,  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT 
CLASS  4— OLD  HORSES 

In  this  class  the  horses  will  be  judged  in  competition,  and  the  Judges  may  award 
a  First,  Second  and  Third  Prize  and  "  Highly  Commended  "  Ribbons. 

Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon,  veterinary  surgeon  for  the  city,  also  offers  five  prizes  of  one 
dollar  each. 


No.  of  No.  of 
Ribbon  Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

17 

Sewer  Div. 

,  Albany  St. 

Jas.  McDonough 

Bob 

23 

18 

18 

Paving     ' ' 

Charlestown 

Jos.  Everett 

Kate 

19 

14 

19 

Paving     ' ' 

East  Boston 

nVilliam  Gallagher 

Billy 

(4tb  Year  In  Parade) 

23 

18 

20 

San. 

N.  Grove  St. 

Samuel  Blair 

Sam 

19 

13 

21 

San.         " 

.<       ., 

John  J.  Kilduff 

Vet.  Driver 

Frank 

18 

12 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


25 


The  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes 

Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals,  Brass  Shields,  Special  Prizes 
etc.,  used  by  the  BOSTON  WORK^HORSE  PARADE  XSSO^ 
CIATION  for  the  last  eight  years  were  made  by  the 

BOSTON     BADGE    CO. 


.JPO  . 

K^n 

CO 

J-H 

o 

CJ1 

^-& 

^^C^ 

t"^ 

■ 

m  r 

We  make  a  Specialty  of  Superior  Prize  Ribbon  Rosettes,  Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze  Medals, 
Athletic  Medals,  Club  and  Class  Pins,  Banners,  Flags,  etc. 

WRITE    FOR    CATALOGUES     OR    ESTIMATES 

BOSTON    BADGE    CO. 

629  Old  South  Building  294  Washington  St.,  Boston 

26 


CITY  OF  BOSTON,  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT 

In  the  following  classes  Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon,  veterinary  surgeon  for  the  city,  olTers 
twenty-five  prizes  of  one  dollar  each. 

The  Judges  may  also  award  such  rilibons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem 
to  be  deserved. 

CLASS  5— PAVING  DIVISION 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

22 

Paving  Division 

Joseph  McGuire 

1 

23 

(1              11 

Patrick  Thornton 

1 

24 

"              " 

Daniel  Leary 

1 

25 

"              " 

G.  McCauley 

1 

26 

u 

Thomas  Egan 

1 

27 

Patrick  Murray 

2 

CLASS  6— STREET  CLEANING  SERVICE 


No.  of 

Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

28 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Albany  Street 

Patrick  McCormack 

1 

29 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Albany  Street 

Stephen  A.  Saw^yer 

2 

30 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
■   Albany  Street 

Michael  Kennedy 

1 

31 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Albany  Street 

C.  J.  Wildberger 

1 

32 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Albany  Street 

James  Cassell 

2 

33 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Albany  Street 

John  Killigrew^ 

2 

34 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
N.  Grove  St. 

Charles  Noone 

2 

35 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Highland  St. 

Richard  Kelley 

2 

36 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Highland  St. 

Joseph  T.  Ward 

2 

37 

Street  Cleaning  Service 
Highland  Street 

Charles  W.  Bleiler 

1 

27 


Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

20    Exchange   Place,    Boston 


Telephone,  Main  4640 


28 


CLASS  7     STREET  WATERING  AND  OILING  SERVICE 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


38  Street  Watering  and  Oiling  Service  Patrick  Cronin 

Highland  Street 

39  Street  Watering  and  Oiling  Service  John  Burke 

Highland  Street 


CLASS  8— WATER  DEPARTMENT 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


40 

Water 

Dept.,,  Albany  Street 

Michael  Burke,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

41 

« 

David  Leo 

42 
43 

<< 

Michael  Ronan 
Michael  M.  McGrath 

44 

" 

Thomas  Williams 

45 

Med  ford  Street 

Joseph  Reed 

46 

« 

George  Reed 

29 


/i^^-:*  7'^f 


'Name  on  Every  Piece' 


CHOCOLATES 

Good  for  Gifts 
Good  for  Girls 


HTHEY  are  made  of  the  choic- 
est materials  the  market 
affords,  combined  in  their  pure 
natural  form  to  taste  as  they 
should  taste. 

Lowney's  "CREST"  Choco- 
lates, at  one  dollar  a  pound,  are 
the  most  exquisite  gift  a  girl  can 
get,  and  she  will  revel  in  their 
surprises  and  their  flavors. 

The 

Walter  M.  Lowney 

Company 

BOSTON 


C.  F.  Eddy 
Company 

Coal 
Dealers 


West  Newton,  Mass, 

Telephone,  Newton  West  91 


COMPLIMENTS     OF 

A.  E.  BLISS 

GENERAL    SUPERINTENDENT 

MALDEN   ELECTRIC  CO. 

MALDEN  AND  MELROSE 
GAS  LIGHT  CO. 


30 


CLASS  9— SEWER  SERVICE 


No.  of 

Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


47 

Sewer  Service,  Albany  Street 

Timothy  Kennedy 

48 

" 

William  Cluff 

49 

" 

Jeremiah  Sheehan 

50 

.< 

John  F.  Breen 

51 

" 

John  McDonald 

CLASS  10— SANITARY  SERVICE,  NORTH  GROVE  STREET 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  0 
Horses 


52       San.  Service,  N.  Grove  Street 

53 

54 

55 

56 

57 

58 

59 


John  L.  Sullivan,  Vet.  Driver 

Jeremiah  Mahoney 
*Michael  J.  Connolly 

M.  F.  McGrath 
*\Vm.  F.  Moran 

John  Teague 

Timoth\-  Dwyer 

John  HoUoran 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


31 


Statistics    say    7,000  horses  died 
from  ills  and  accidents    in    Chicago 
during  1911,  while  New  York  City  re- 
ported 20,000.    These  figures  indicate 
the  terrible  loss  sustained  by  owners 
of  work-horses  in  the  large  cities  of 
the  United  States.   A  good  percentage 
of  this  loss  would  have  been  saved  if 
Dr.  Daniels'  Handy  Home  Treatment 
Remedies    had    been    used    at    the 
proper  time.     Daniels'   Horse   Colic 
Cure  is  warranted  to  cure  or  money 
refunded.     Costs  $1.00 — enough  for 
4  to  8  cases  of  horse  colic.     Daniels' 
Distemper,    Coughs,   of   great   value   in  heaves  ; 
50  cents.     Daniels'   Horse    Renovator   Powders. 
Any  owner  who  will  feed  his  horse  one  package  of  these  Powders   and  is 
not  delighted  with  results  gets  his  money  back  for  the  asking —  50  cents. 
At  Jaynes'  and  other  good  Druggists. 


Fever   Drops   for    Colds 
acclimates   green  horses 


COMPLIMENTS 


A     FRIEND 


32 


CLASS 

11- 

-SANITARY  SERVICE,  ALBANY  STREET 

No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

60       Siin.  Service,  Albany  Street                Michael  Crimmins 

61 

'                      Michael  Moran 

62 

'                      John  O'Brien 

63 

Michael  Gilmore 

64 

'                      Cornelius  Sullivan 

65 

Lawrence  Conroy 

66 

John  Flemming 

67 

Andy  McDowell 

68 

W.  P.  Graney 

69 

Patrick  Norton 

2 

CLASS  12— MILK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


70 
71 
72 
73 
74 
75 
76 
77 
78 


Frank  E.  Boyd 
C.  Brigham  Co. 


Theophile  Belliveau 

^  Blind  Horse)   1 

George  W.  Swiminer 

1 

Phineas  Hubbard 

1 

Jas.  B.  Laffin 

2 

Walter  S.  Hicks 

2 

John  D.  Comeau 

2 

Laurie  F.  Cooper 

2 

James  W.  Haley 

2 

Emerson  Hunt 

2 

NECCO  WAFERS 


The  big  roll, —  made  in    eight  flavors,   also    assorted 
Hub  Wafers  are  similar,  but  with  a  transparent  wrapper 


ON  SALE  EVERYWHERE 


MADE  BY 

New  England  Confectionery  Company 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


COMPLIMENTS 


A     FRIEND 


34 


MILK— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


79  John  J.  Corkcn- 

80  "       " 

81  Edward  E.  Cutler 

82  Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

83  " 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

84  " 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

85  " 

86  " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

87  " 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


90 
91 

Third 

92 
93 
94 
95 
96 
97 
98 
99 
100 


M.  Goldman 

Year  in  Parade 

S.  R.  Johnson 

R.  J.  McAdoo 

M.  Sullivan 

Turner  Centre  Creamery 


D.  Whiting  &  Sons 


101  " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

102  " 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

103  " 

104  " 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

105  " 


106  " 

107  J.  K.  Whiting  & 

108  "  " 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 


Co. 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


James  J.  Corkery 
P.  J.  Murphy 
William  F.  Howell 
*George  B.  Hamilton 
Carl  H.  Thomas 
Ralph  Armstrong 
William  Nicholson 
William  M.  Campbell 
*Elmer  E.  Morse 
James  J.  Judge 
Henry  A.  DeLano 
Samuel  H.  McKeenan 
*Maurice  Yosell 
Joe  DeEll 
Harold  A.  McAdoo 
Fred  Buscemi 
Daniel  S,  Desmond 
*John  C.  Martin 
*James  H.  Martin 
*John  Carroll 
Benj.  H.  Nickerson 
Thomas  G.  Durgin 
*Charles  D.  Fletcher 
*Wesley  E.  Hayes 
*Herbert  F.  Knowles 
Charles  H.  Pike 
William  H.  Wellington 
Arthur  F.  Pike 
Percy  S.  Day 
*Robert  C.  Hezlett 


No.  of 
Horses 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


C.  F.  HOVEY  ^  CO. 

Boys^  and  Youths^  Clothes 

FOR    SUMMER     WEAR 

Boys*  and  Youths*  Long  Trouser  Suits 

Norfolk  or  Single   Breasted   Styles,   half    or    full    lined,    cuff     bottom 
trousers.     Sizes  for  Boys,  14  to  18. 

Sizes  for  Youths,  32  to  36.  $12.50   tO   $22.50 

KhaKi  Suits 

In  Norfolk  and  Double  Breasted   Styles  for  Boys,  with   Knickerbocker 
Trousers.     Sizes  7  to  17.  $3.00    tO   $5.00 

Khaki  Trousers 

Knickerbocker  Style,   Sizes  7  to  17,  at  $1.00 

Long  Trousers,  $  1 .00  and  $  1 .50 

Soft  Summer  Shirts 

12  to  14  Neckbands,  made  of  Soisette,  Madras  and   Silks,  with   collars 
attached  or  separate.  $1.00  tO  $3.00 


COMPLIMENTS 


A     FRIEND 


36 


CLASS  13— BAKERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of           No.  of 
Ribbon          Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

109 

Sixth  Y 

Drake  Bros.  Co. 

ear  in  Parade 

*Frank  T.  Daley 

110 

Ferguson  Bakery 

Joseph  Gormley 

111 

*Judson  Swinnimer 

112 

*James  A.  Cronk 

113 

Frank  Feehan 

114 

Third  -i 

'ear  in  Parade 

James  McCorkle 

115 

Edward  Renfield 

116 

James  Bailey 

2 

117 

Wallace  West 

2 

118 

Thomas  Hunt 

2 

119 

James  T.  Powders 

2 

120 

Fox  Bakery 

*H.  A.  Johnson 

121 

" 

John  M.  Milne 

122 

" 

A.  J.  Bradeen 

123 

" 

J.  M.  Roberts 

124 

" 

Albert  L.  Curtis 

125 

" 

♦Robert  K.  Patterson,  Vet. 

Driver  1 

126 

" 

*John  L.  Sullivan 

127 

" 

♦Patrick  Wood 

128 

0.  B.  Oilman 

Emil  Richwagen 

129 

Third 

Year  in  Parade 

Michael  Davis 

130 

"       '• 

Albert  Lindquist 

131       ' 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

*Henry  McGowan 

132 

Third 

\V.  X.  Jenkins 

Year  in  Parade 

♦Robert  J.  Durkee 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


37 


COLEMAN  BROTHERS 


General    Contractors 


BOSTON 


Sole  Partner     JOHN     F.     COLEMAN 


fm  i^  i^  f^  i^  1^  f^  f^  i^  1^  1^ 
COMPLIMENTS    OF 

THE 

PUREOXIA 

Co. 

^jjj^  j^  j^  j^  j^  j^  j^  j^  j^  j^ 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

THE 

Hunt-Spiller 

MANUFACTURING 
CORPORATION 


CLASS  14— LAUNDRY 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


S.  J.  Richardson,  Vet.  Driver 
*Frank  H.  Ames 
*Daniel  MacLeod 
*T.  J.  Cronin 
*Maurice  Daniels 
*William  W.  Paterson 
A.  C.  Burr 
Waldo  Roby 
Henry  K.  Barnard 
James  P.  O'Brien 

143  Eaton  Towel  Supply  Co.  J.  C.  Duncan 

144  Empire  Coat  &  Linen  SupplyCo.  Eugene  Sullivan 

145  Joseph  A.  Irwin  Joseph  A.  Irwin 

146  Marine  Office  Towel  Supply  Co.  *Patrick  Hennessey 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

147  New  England  Towel  Supply  Co.  *John  E.  Murphy 

148  "  "  "  "       "       G.  E.  Phillips 

149  White  Cross  Laundry  Co.  James  A.  King 


133 

City  Laundry  Co 

134 

135 

136 

137 

138 

139 

140 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

141 

"           "           " 

142 

.< 

'Entitled  to  Driver's'Badge 


C.  BRIQHAM  CO. 

WHOLESALE   AND    RETAIL    DEALERS   IN 

/BMlk,  Cream   nnb   Butter 

158   Massachusetts   Avenue 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

TELEPHONES,  CAMBRIDGE  262  and  263 


For  Over  43  Years 

WE    HAVE    BEEN    MAKERS    OF 

GOOD  HARNESS 

AND 

COLLARS 

327    Seta    of    our     Harness 
appeared  in  the  Last  Parade 

JAMES  FORGIFS  SONS 

19  and  20  South  Market  St.,  Albany  St.  and 
Mass.  Avenue.  BOSTON 


40 


y  Healthful 


CLASS  15     DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


150         Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 


151 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 


152 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

153 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

154 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 


155 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

156 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 


157 


M.  J.  Shea 
"Timothy  J.  O'Connor,  Vet.  Driv. 

John  Daly 

Cornelius  Curtin 
''Albert  Williams 
■"John  Ahern 

Andrew  J.  Dooly 

Timothy  J. O'Connor,  Jr. 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


41 


TEL,   ROXBUKY    471 


TKT^.   CHARLESTOWN   460 


GREENE  BROS.  &  CO. 

Carriage   and  Wagon   Manufacturers 

Also  Builders  of  Truck  Bodies 

ALL  KINDS  OF  REPAIRING  NEATLY  DONE 

FIRST  CLASS  WORK  SATISFACTION  GUARANTEED 

WAGONS  CALLED  FOR  AND  DELIVERED 

Junction   of   Massachusetts   Avenue   and   Southampton    Street 


BRANCH  REPAIR  SHOP 

404  to  411   RUTHERFORD  AVENUE,  CHARLESTOWN 

Office  Telephone,  Cambridge  257  Residence  Telephone,  Roxbury  841 

I.  FREEDMAN  &  CO. 


DEALERS   IN 


Masons'  and  Plasterers'  Supplies 

LIME,  CEMENT,  PLASTER,  SAND,  CENTER  PIECES 
HAIR,  FLUE   LINING,  LATHS,  BRICK,   DRAIN    PIPE 


51-53-55   First  Street 


East  Cambridge 


Sole  Agents  for  Farnam-  Cheshire,   Pittsfield  and   Vermont  Lime 

42 


CLASS  16     DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry      | 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

158 

Waller  W.  Blanchard 

Walter  W.  Blanchard 

1 

159 

John  Donnelly  &  Son 

John  E.  Lyons 

1 

160 

Eastern  Cigar  Co. 

Theo.  R.  Hamilton 

1 

161 

E.  F.  Gerry  Co. 

*Wm.  P.  Cook 

2 

162 

J.  F.    Heme  Co. 

Albert  Defoe 

1 

163 

" 

Geo.  McCarthy 

•       2 

164 

" 

Hiram  B.  Heme 

2 

165 

" 

John  J.  Canty 

2 

166 

Geo.  T.  Hoyt  Awning  Co. 

C.  H.  Pigeon 

167 

Kaplan  Bros. 

David  Kaplan 

168  The  Kelly  Peanut  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

169  The  Kelly  Peanut  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

170  J.  J.  Kenney 

Louis  Fiorentino 
*Richard  Powell 
J.J.  Kenney 

171 

"  "       " 

Michael  Kenney 

172 

M.  A.  Langenthal 

M.  A.  Langenthal 

173  A.  A.  Lemay 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

174  R.  Marston  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

175  R.  Marston  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

176  R.  Marston  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

177  M.  E.  Moore 

A.  A.  Lemay 

W^m.  0.  Robson 
^Raymond  E.  Valiquet 

Galen  M.  Spinney 
*Michael  Meaner 

177A 

J.  D.  Oreino 

J.  D.  Oreino 

178 

W.  H.  H.  Parcher 

John  Doyle 

179 

George  H.  Pieper  &  Co. 

George  H.  Pieper 

180 

Albert  P.  Rockwood 

Martin  E.  Coliten 

181  \V.  C.  Sanders  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

182  Maurice  H.  Simon 

*Walter  Mackie 
Maurice  H.  Simon 

183 

Smith  cS:  (\)hen 

Harry  Smith 

184 

J.  \V.  Slrieder  Co. 

Francis  P.  Gallagher 

185 

Geo.  J .  Quigley                   (Blind  Horse)        1 

186 

E.  Teel  &  (^o. 

Patrick  J.  Morrissey 

1 

186A 

George  H.  Wickes  &  Son 

*George  Pennington 

1 

43 


'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


PASTEURIZATION    IN-THE-BOTTLE 

(The  perfection  of  the  art  of  milk  handling) 

It  is  now  generally  accepted  by  health  authorities  that  complete  protection 
against  conveyance  of  disease  through  milk  can  be  secured  only  by  Pasteurization, 
/.  e.,  true  Pasteurization  carried  on  under  scientific  conditions.  These  conditions 
consist  of  treatment  of  milk  at  a  temperature  of  145  degrees  for  twenty  minutes  fol- 
lowed by  thorough  cooling — a  method  that  has  been  practised  by  us  for  the  last  few 
years. 

We  are  now  able  to  offer  milk  Pasteurized  by  a  method  even  in  advance  of 
that  above  described,  consisting  of  treatment  after  the  milk  is  placed  in  the  bottle. 
It  can  be  seen  that  Pasteurization  in  the  final  package  instead  of  in  bulk  secures  to 
the  consumer  an  uncontaminated  and  absolutely  safe  product.  Furthermore,  in  this 
method  the  bottles  are  covered  with  a  metal  seal  which  is  proof  against  tampering. 
This  is  the  perfection  of  the  art  of  milk  handling. 

Our  Crown  Brand,  10c.  per  quart,  Blue  Label  or  Inspected  Milk,  12c.  per  quart 
and  our  bottled  cream  are  all  delivered  Pasteurized  in-the-bottle. 

D.  WHITING  &  SONS 


R.  A.  Kennett 

TRUCKMAN 

and 
FORWARDER 

6    FULTON    STREET 
BOSTON 

Teleplione,  r«icslxiiio*Ticl   530 


Compliments 

of 

A  Friend 


44 


CLASS  17— DELIVERIES,  DEPARTMENT  STORES 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or   Third,   as   they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.o 
Horses 


187       IC.  F.  Hovey  &  Co. 

Ninth^iYear  in  Parade 


188 

'                "           "       " 

189 

<.       « 

190 

"           "       " 

191 

Fifth 

Year  in 

Parade 

192 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

193 

Sixth  Year  in 

Parade 

194 

"       " 

195 

Sixth 

Year  in 

Parade 

196 

"       " 

197 

"          "       " 

198 

"          "    ," 

199 

Ninth 

Year  in  Parade 

200 

Ninth 

Year  ii 

1  Parade 

201  Henry  Siegel  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

202 


203 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

204 


205 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


*Jas.  H.  Padden 
Wm.  E.  Denvir,  Vet.  Driver 
*John  H.  McKenzie 

J  as.  A.  Sweeney 
*Lewis  H.  Adams 

Leo  Med  us 

Jeremiah  J.  Murphy 

Patrick  Durand 
*Jas.  Gagan 
*Jas.  Jensen 

Frank  Mc Govern 
*Paul  Turner 
*Louis  Brier,  Vet.  Driver 
*Thomas  J.  Lonergan 

Henry  Miles 

Maurice  J.  Burns 

Henry  Clark 

John  Finlay 
*Thos.  Hill 


'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


45 


WE    make    a   specialty    of    handling  nothing   but   NUMBER 
ONE    HORSES  in    all    classes    right    off    the   farms   of 
Indiana  bought  by  George  McKinney. 

Regular  auction  sales  every  Wednesday,  at  I  P.  M. 


McKINNEY   BROTHERS  &  CO, 

Brighton  Horse  Exchange  and  Sale  Stables 

217  Friend  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Haymarket  848 


Honey  Bread 
"Sweet  as  Honey" 


WHITE 
SEAL 
BREAD 

With  the  Real  Old  Home  Flavor 


RED 


ACRE 


FARM 


FERGUSON  BAKERY 

GENERAL  BAKING  COMPANY 


(INCORPORATED) 

STOW.   MASS. 

Railroad  Station,  South  Acton 
TELEPHONE,  WEST   ACTON  8 

Hospital  and  Rest  for  Abused  and 
Injured  Horses 

Old  Favorites  Pensioned  for  Life.    Country  Rest 

for  City  Working  Horses.     Worn-out  and 

Aged    Horses    Rescued    from    Cheap 

Sales  Stables  and  Junk  W^agons. 

SUPPORTED    BY  CONTRIBUTIONS 

P.  O.  Box,  Stow  400 


46 


CLASS  18     FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

The  Judges   may  award   such   ribbons,   First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


Horses 


20G 
207 
208 
209 
210 
211 
212 
213 
214 
215 
216 
217 
218 
219 
220 
221 
222 

Third 

223 
224 


Bloombert^  Bros. 
J.  Caldwell  &  C^o. 
George  S.  Densmore 

Donovan  &  Co. 


James  M.  Douglass 
Alger  E.  Eaton 
S.  V.  Garland 


I.  Goodman 


James  F.  Grady 

Year  in  Parade 


Highland  Furniture  Co. 
James  G.  Haynes  Estate 


Abraham  Abrams 
John  Hunt 
Hyman  Rosenfield 
*George  W.  Murray 
*John  J.  Donovan 
*D.  H.  Donovan 
*Frank  McFogue 
*Gustavus  Broad 
*Alfred  Hanson 
*William  B.  Coulter 
Walter  E.  Gallagher 
Augustin  Tallent 
John  W.  Densmore 
John  J.  Cavanaugh 
*Martin  Tallent 
I.  Goodman 
James  F.  Grady 
Israel  Sriberg 
John  Gallagher 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


47 


Convincing  Reasons  Why  You  Should 
Do  Your  Shopping  in  this  Great  Store 

In  addition  to  being  Boston's  best  store  for  new  and  novel  articles,  this  house 
is  undeniably  the  best  store  for  staple  goods  of  all  kinds.  Through  our  perfected 
system  of  merchandising,  you  will  find  here  every  week  in  the  year  plentiful 
assortments  of  every  kind  of  merchandise  we  carry. 

OUR  PRICES  ARE  ABSOLUTELY  THE  LOWEST.  We  are  never 
undersold.  We  guarantee  the  price  of  everything  we  sell  to  be  as  low  as,  or  lower 
than,  the  same  article  can  be  bought  elsewhere  in  New  England. 


O  UR  GUARANTEE  :   Every  article  bought  here  —  no  matter  how 
low  the  price  may  be — carries  our  guarantee  of  satisfaction  to  the  purchaser. 


Jordan,  Marsh  Company 


OF  EVEKIT  KINlir 

Implements*      y, 

TEiEPhONE     Machines. 

RicnMOND  2360         Woodenwarc 

(incorporated)  „^-,„«j 

51  AND  32    NORTM  MARKET  STWEFT.  BOSTON. 


JhjLmlsJies-  Approved Bmploye&s. 
Morcaniile.  A.^riculturaJ.  HorfictiUuraL 

TEliEPHONE  RICH.    2360 


COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

A     FRIEND 


CHAS.    DAILEY   &   CO. 

SOUTH  END,  BACK  BAY  and  ROXBURY 

EXPRESS 

Trucking  and  Forwarding  of  Freight 


73  BEACH  ST. 

Telephone,  Oxford  337 

BOSTON,  MASS 


76  KINGSTON  ST. 

Telephone,  Fort  Hill  3900 


Meyer  Jonasson  Company 


OUTER     GARMENTS 

FOR 

LADIES  AND  MISSES 


Tremont    and    Boylston    Streets 
BOSTON 


48 


FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS  (Continued) 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


225  (Tcorge  T.  Jaques 

226  Valdemar  O.  Kalberg 

227  Thomas  McDowell 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


228 

Louis  Myers 

229 

Paine  Furniture  Co. 

230 

" 

231 

" 

232 

« 

233  Martin  Singer 

234  Sriberg  &  Co. 


*Henry  Rose  1 

Archie  F.  Haggie  1 

*John  Bronkhorst  1 

Israel  Garber  1 

*William  Wallace,  Vet.  Driver  1 

Joseph  Sherman  1 

James  Smith  1 

*Thomas  H.  McManus, 

Vet.  Driver  2 

Philip  Goodman  .  1 

Abie  Dashoff  1 


i^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


49 


The  Beer  That   Made  Milwaukee  Famous 

Jos.  Gahm  ^  Son 

GENERAL     N.    E.    AGENTS     OF     THE 

Jos.  Schlitz  Brewing  Co.,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale  Dealers,  Importers  and  Bottlers 
of  High  Grade  Goods  Only 


340-350   C  STREET,   SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE    CONNECTION 


Established  1882  E.  A.  HARRIS 

H.  A.  HOVEY  &  CO. 

Dealers  in 

Butter,  Cbccse  and  e.m$ 

No.  32  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephone,  Richmond  930  BOSTON 

Compliments  of 

C.  B.  ROSS 

TRUCKMAN 

19   North   Market  Street,   BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


LONDON   HARNESS 
COMPANY 

JOHN   HANCOCK  BUILDING 

176  DEVONSHIRE  STREET 
27  to  29  FEDERAL  STREET 


Cocke  Coal  €o. 


MALDEN   and    MEDFORD 


50 


CLASS   19— PROVISIONS 
LIGHT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,    First,   Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


235  American  Egg  Co. 

236  "  "       " 

237  Benson  Bros. 

238  J.  D.  Brennan 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

239  A.  Cantillo 


A.  J.  Cunningham  Co. 
Joseph  C.  Dolan 

James  Gallaline 
William  Krauss 


240 
241 
242 
243 
244 

245  \V.  H.  Lerned  &  Sons 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

246  M.  A.  Medeiros 

247  H.W.  Murphy 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

248  Frank  Rotondo 

249  Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

250  Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

251  Nathan  E.  Smith 
252 
253 
254 
255 
256 

257  Toomey  &  Ormon 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

258  George  J.  Warren 

259  Julius  Weinstein 
260 

261          Wciner  &  Walter  Co. 


George  F.  Stodder 

J.  L.  Sulli\'an 
Joseph  P.  Sweeney 
Tillev  &  Brown 


Max  Gottfield 
Israel  Premark 
Bernard  Dennison 
*  Francis  Craven 
Alfonso  Cantillo 
*William  F.  McDonald 
Everett  E.  Hall 
Harry  E.  Hurley 
Joseph  Gildea 
John  Krauss 
*Fred  S.  Douglas 

M.  A.  Medeiros 
*Fred  DeCorsey 
John  Henry 
*John  W'.  Bowker 
Thomas  C.  Newell 

Richard  Uff 
*Edward  B.  Miller 

P.  F.  Barry 

J.  L.  Sullivan 
*Thomas  Wm.  Melly 
*Isaac  A.  Tilley 
*Frank  H.  Hoar 

George  J.  Warren 

Jacob  Sherbon 

Saul  Weinstein 

Joseph  Chanos 


(Blind  Horse) 


*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


51 


=  Roessle  Brewery 

PREMIUM   LAGER  BEER 

IN    WOOD    OR    BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  Highest  Type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Quality, 
Age,    Substance,   Purity    and    Aroma,   and  is   Absolute    Perfection. 

ESTABLISHED     1846 


OFFICE,     BREWERY    AND    BOTTLING     DEPARTMENT 


1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE 


BOSTON,  MASS. 


TELEPHONE   CONNECTION 

RHODES  BROS.  CO. 

O^roceries  anb  Probisiiong 

WHOLESALE  and  RETAIL 

438  to  444  Tremont  St. 

170  to  174  Massachusetts  Ave. 

256  to  260  Warren  St.  (Rox.  Dist.) 

10  and  11    Harvard  Sq.,  Brookline 

BOSTON 


HILL  &  HILL 

Ibatness 

Iboree  ant)  Stable  600^0 

Automobile  Accessories 

Traveling  Bags  and  Cases 
Leather  Specialties 

90  Federal  St.,         Boston,  Mass. 


L.  B.  WflTERHDUSE    MALDEN  COAL 

Cruckman  company 


155  FEDERAL  STREET 
BOSTON       ^        ^        MASS. 

TEL.,  MAIN  342U3 


228  PLEASANT  STREET 


Telephones,  494  and  495 


52 


CLASS  20— PROVISIONS 
HEAVY    HORSES 

The  Judges   may  award  such   ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVERS   NAME 

So'^s^s 

262 

Brighton  Public  Market 

*William  A.  Dorr 

263 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

P.  J.  Mullin 

264 

a                      a                      a 

*Charles  Mclnnes 

265 

a                      .<                       << 

*Harry  A.  Breen 

266 

"                       "                       " 

*John  J.  Diggins 

267 

Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

*J.  F.  Howard 

268 
Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

*J.  F.  O'Brien 

269 
Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

T.  W.  Dixon 

270 

Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

*T.  J.  McNiff 

270A 

Third  Ye 

P.  Di  Napoli 

ar  in  Parade 

*Michael  Di  Napoli 

270B 

Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

*Orizeo  Di  Napoli 

270C 

"       "              " 

Amadeo  Jorio 

270D 

Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade 

*Carmen  Vital e 

271 

Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

Martin  J.  Kenny 

272 

"   " 

*Patrick  P.  Shaughnessy 

273 

" 

Benjamin  Thebido 

274 

"   " 

Thos.  Coyne 

275 

Emerson  &  Brando 

John  F.  Collins 

276 

M.  Fitzpatrick  &  Son 

Robert  Clemens 

277 

Knight  &  Co. 

Michael  Vitagliano 

278 

Third  Ye 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 

ar  in  Parade 

^Patrick  A.  Quinn,  Vet.  Driver       2 

279 

Shawmut  Grocer\-  &  Pro\-.  Cc 

).     James  V.  Dalia 

1 

280 

Snow  &  Parker 

Eben  R.  Austin 

1 

281 

P.  T.  Sullivan 

Orin  Delaney 

1 

282 

John  Wright 

John  Wright 

1 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


53 


The  Stetson  Goal  Go. 


WHARF   AND   MAIN  OFFICE: 


496  First  Street,  South  Boston 


JOHN  A.  STETSON 
ROBERT  D.  HALL 


President  and  General  Manager 
Treasurer 


J,  C.  DRISCOLL 

TRUCKMAN 

AND 
FORWARDER 

46  FULTON  ST.         BOSTON 

COMPLIMENTS    OF 

Hotel  Bellevue 

FULTON   O'BRION 

FLOUR,  GRAIN,  HAY 
FEED  AND  STRAW 

Nos.  3  and  4  UNION  SQUARE 
SOMERVILLE 

Elevator  and  Storehouse,  28  Lake  Street 
TELEPHONE.  SOMERVILLE  264-W 

Hotel   and    Family    Supplies    a    Specialty 

TELEPHONE    CONNECTION 

STURTEVANT  &  HALEY 

BEEF  AND  SUPPLY 
COMPANY 

40  Faneuil  Hall  Market 
BOSTON 

54 


CLASS  21— CONFECTIONERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


283  liuk'iJciulciU  Ice  Cream  Co. 

284  McDonald-Weber  Co. 
285 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

286  The  Three  Millers  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

287  New  England  Confectionery  Co, 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

288 
289 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

290 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

291 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

292 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

293 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

294 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

295 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


W.  I.  Karp 

Fred  A.  Bentley 
*  Joseph  I.  Pingree 
*John  W.  Phipps 

Joseph  H.  Peacock 
^Joseph  P.  McCall 

George  H.  Masterson 
*Warren  E.  Davis 
*\V.  T.  Seymour 

Warren  Kirk 
*J.  H.Ferdinand  Miller 
nVilliam  H.  Collins 
*Bartley  M.  Roe 


*Entitled  to  Driver's 


55 


■THIRTY-FIFTH  YEARi 

Helping  Men  to  Help  Themselves 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

Incorporated 

Corner  Davis  Street  and  Harrison  Avenue 
il^OJ^ILm   arid  "^^TOOID 

We  deliver  anywhere,  in  any  quantity,  at  Lowest  Prices 

lEver^  ©rber  fIDeans  IRelief  to  the  poor 

Telephone,  Tremont  658       OLIVER  C.  ELLIOT,  Superintendent 


The  Boyd  Brockton 
Transportation   Co. 


INCORPORATED 


BOSTON    OFFICES; 


71    and   139  Kingston  Street 
54  Chatham  Street 
89  Broad  Street 


Member  of  Expressmen's  League 


COMPLIMENTS       OF 


The  Rescue  Mission 
Wood  and  Coal  Yard 

65  WEST  DEDHAM   ST. 
BOSTON,   MASS. 


Franl(  M.  Babcock 

Ceamstcr  and 
forwarding  Jlgent 

Office:  7  Water  St.,  Room  306 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  Main  4184-2 


J.  S.  Newcomb 


G.  M.  Legg 


J.  S.  NEWCOMB  &  CO. 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

Beef,  Matton,  Lamb,  Veal  and  Poultry 

Basement,  4  Quincy  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Richmond  220 


56 


GLASS  22— GROCERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


296  John  F.  Barry 

297  "     "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

298  Ant.  Bicchieri  &  Co. 

299  Nathan  Berkovitz 

300  Burke  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

302  J.  Facktorofif 

303  Chas.  S.  Gilliatt 

304  J.  T.  Glines&  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


305 

Habib  Bros. 

306 

Martin  L.  Hall  Co. 

307 

Daniel  E.  Hennessey 

308 

Chas.  S.  Johnson 

309 

H.  A.  Johnson  Co. 

310 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

311 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

312 

Frank  Lallv 

313         J.  E.  Moran  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

314 


William  J.  Fallon 
*David  J.  Barry 

Nunzio  Bicchieri 
Nathan  Berkovitz 
*Albert  H.  Savage 

*Wm.  E.  Glennon 

Henry  B.  Wing 

*  James  R.  Boyd 

*Geo.  J.  Carmichael 
*Frank  B.  Dodge 
Ralph  J.  Hennessey 
Woodbury  Melcher 
Bernard  Donahue 
Wm,  Grady 

*J.  F.  Murphy 

Frank  J.  Staffier 
*William  C^onnelh- 

Dennis  J.  O'Leary 


(Blind  Horse) 


57 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


East   Boston  Gas   Company 

Headquarters  for  the  Latest  Devices  in 

Gas    Appliances 


Light 


for 

Heat 


26   CENTRAL  SQUARE 

EAST  BOSTON,  MASS. 


Power 


8  EVERETT  AVE. 

CHELSEA,  MASS. 


TELEPHONES 


Office 
Office 
Works 
Works 


East  Boston  150 

Chelsea  19 

East  Boston  385 

Chelsea  327 


OFFICE    HOURS: 

8   A.  M.  to  6  P.  M. 
Saturdays,  8  A.  M.  to  8  P.  M. 

Office  will  close  at  ONE  O'CLOCK  on 
SATURDAYS  during  June,  July,  'Au- 
gust, September. 


Shattuck  <Sc  Jones 

INCORPORATED 

FISH  OF       "" 
ALL 
KINDS 

128    FANEUIL    HALL    MARKET 


OYSTERS 
CLAMS 


BOSTON,   MASS. 


Office  Telephone,  Haymarket  221  Stable  Telephone,  Somerville  2796-W  Reside   ce  Telephone,  Somerville  1565 


C.  BOWEN 


'^^^^^  "^  SAFES  AND  MACHINERY 

AND  GENERAL  TRUCKMAN 
SAFES    AND    MACHINERY    STORED 


44  SUDBURY  ST.  and  2  BOWKER  ST. 

58 


BOSTON,   MASS. 


GROCERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  Of 
Horses 


315  New  England  (Grocery  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

316  Parker  Masters  Co. 
317 

318 
319 
320  ■ 
321 

322  M.  D.  Lewis 

323  J.  L.  Putnam 

324  C.  B.  Ross 

325  "     "     " 

326  "     "     " 

327  "     "     " 

328  G.  Savarese  &  Son 

329  Alfred  Scaramelli 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

330  C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

331  Swallow  cS:  Fales  Co. 

332  Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

333  L.  Sevel 

334  V.  Tassinari  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

335  Timherlake  l^  Small 


*Jack  Forgione 
Harry  H.  Wallace 
Frank  McCue 

Thos.    R.   Clarke  <Blind  Horse) 

*Vincent  J.  Kelley 
*Geo.  R.  Davidson 

Frank  D.  Flood 
*Gustaviis  H.  Nystrom 

Julius  L.  Putnam 

Arthur  Vantassel  2 

H.  Fletcher  2 

Frank  Clements  2 

*George  Daniels  2 

D.  Boninno  1 

*Joe  Peirano  1 

*A.  B.  Leighton  2 

Samuel  Butchart  1 

*\Vm.  H.  Carter  1 

L.  Sevel  1 

*Primo  Albcrghim  1 

Thomas  F.  Dillon  1 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


59 


E,   I  BABCOCK 

Coal  and  Charcoal 

47  SHERWOOD  STREET,  ROXBURY 

TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  369 

DEERFOOT  FARMS,  southborough,  mass. 

Boston  Store  New  York  Store 

9  BOSWORTH  STREET  172  CHAMBERS  STREET 

"DEERFOOT" 

SAUSAGE  SALT  PORK     MILK 

SAUSAGE  MEAT  BACON         CREAM 

FRESH  PORK  LARD  BUTTER 

EGGS  BUTTERMILK 

^^Deerfoot- Yorkshire  Ham,  made  for  us  by   an    English   Exporting   House.     The  best 

Ham  we  know  —  try  one.  fphomf^  S  l^AIN  2787 
TELEPHONES^  I^^,pj  2289 

Compliments  of 


ANT.  BICCHIERI   &    CO. 

83  CLARK   ST.,       CAMBRIDGEPORT,  MASS, 


60 


GROCERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


336         Timberkike  &  Small 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


337 
338 
339 
340 


Toomey  &  Ormon 
Williams  Brothers 


341         G.  W.  Wood 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


342 


S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 


343 

i         a 

344 

-         <-             . 

345 

<        u            . 

346 

<        .            < 

347 

<        .<            . 

348 

<        ,<            < 

349 

'        "            ' 

350 

<        «            < 

351 

.        «            . 

352 

Third  Year 

n  Parade 

DRIVER'S    NAME 


Third  Year  in  Parade 


*Chester  B.  Eames 
W.  L.  Wholey 

*A..  B.  Torrence 

*Michael  J.  Hoar 
Leo  J.  Fitzgerald 

*George  R.  Allan 
W.  H.  Paris 
James  Hay 
Fred  N.  Dysart 
Peter  McDonald 

*Joseph  McDonald 
Edward  F.  Hanley 
William  Cousins 
Thos.  Kinnear 
Louis  Knowles 
John  W.  Murphy 
Patrick  Donoghue 
Di  niel  Leighton 


No.  of 
Horses 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


61 


ATWOOD  &  McMANUS 


Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of 


Wooden  Boxes 

Packing  Cases  and 

Kindling  Wood 


TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


Factory  and  Office 

CARTER  and  FOURTH  STREETS,  CHELSEA,  MASSACHUSETTS 

BLINN,  MORRILL  &  COMPANY 


truckmen 


6   CHATHAM   ROW 

AND 

13  FRANKLIN  STREET 
BOSTON 

62 


I 


CLASS  23— PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS 

The  Judges   may  award  such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


354 


Bay  State  St.  Ry.  Co. 


355         Boston  Elevated  R 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


356 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


357 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

358 


359 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

360 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

361 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

362 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


363 
364 
365 
366 
367 
368 
369 


Co. 


Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co 


East  Boston  Gas  Co. 


370 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

371  "         "  "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

372  Maiden  Electric  Co. 
373 


*Walter  A.  Flynn  2 

♦Chester  H.  Meaddox,  Vet.  Driv. 
♦Charles  S.  Moore,  Vet.  Driver 
♦Dennis  McCarthy 

Michael  Kaverny 

Coleman  McDonough 
♦Andrew  Blake,  Vet.  Driver  2 

James  A.  Rinehan  2 

Samuel  D.  Foote  2 

♦Thomas  Murray,  Vet.  Driver  2 

J.  Bannon 
♦Eugene  O'Brien 

Norman  McDonald 

Daniel  Sulli^'an 

Thomas  Kiley 

Frank  F.  Capen 
♦Elmer  V.  Newton 

Herbert  A.  ()li\er 

Josei)h  J.  Reardon 

Fred  C(jllins 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Complime^tts 

of 

A  Friend 


D.  A.  SMITH  CO 
Truckmen 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 
45     ATLANTIC    AVE. 

Telephone,  Richmond  928 


Importers  of  and 
Wholesale  Dealers 

in    Wines  and  Liquors 


Bottlers  of 
Lager  Beer 
Ale  and  Porter 


Bay  View  Bottling 
Company 

467  and  469  East  Eighth  Street 

Proprietors:  SOUTH 

JOHN  S.  LEICHT  Dr\CT/-\\T 

HENRY  I.  SCHREINER  tiUO  1  Ul\ 

Telephone,  South  Boston  544 


Telephone^  Dorchester  796 

DORCHESTER 
ICE    COMPANY 


DORCHESTER 


Dover      | 
Stamping 
and  Mfg. 
Co. 


64 


PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

374 

Maiden  Electric  Co, 

Wm.  J.  Gaffney 

375 

<< 

Albert  B.  Leighton 

376 

Joseph  Mulligan 

377 

" 

Daniel  Sullivan 

378 

" 

Mortimer  F.  Sullivan 

379 

*Sherman  White 

380 

Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas.  Lt.  Co 

.      Morris  P.  Cahill 

381 

Third  y 

ear  in  Parade 

^Cornelius  Callahan 

382 

"           "              "              "           "        " 

John  Murphy 

383 

u           «               .<               <<            <.        < 

John  Glennon 

384 

"           "               "               -           "        " 

Leo  Dunn 

385 

w         < 

Timothy  Sullivan 

386 

"     "      "      "     "   " 

Jeremiah  J.  Buckley 

387 

Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade 

*Daniel  J.  Foley 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


65 


A.  S.  SMITH,  Pres.  THOS.  L.  DUNBAR,  Treas. 

THOS.  COPELAND,  Supt.     W.  C.  SMITH,  Asst.  Supt. 

ESTABLISHED   1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Hammered  Iron  and  Steel  Forgings 


OFFICE    AND    WORKS    AT 

340  MAVERICK  STREET 

EAST  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Somerville   I028.IVI 


COMPLIMENTS 

OF 

JOHN   W.   WHITNEY 

jfilippo  Bruno  Si  Co. 

WHOLESALE 

Xiquor  2)ealers  an&  Bottlers 
322=326=328  North  Street 

TEL.  KlOllMOND  1>723-1 

Compliments  of 

F.  C.  WARREN  &  BRADFORD  CO. 

6  POST   OFFICE  SQUARE 


G.   B.   HOWARD 


M.   D.  CRESSY 


Q.B.HOWARD&CO. 

teamsters 

ant) 

jFoiwarbets 

Clinton  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 
COMPLIMENTS    OF 

J.  H.  Richardson 

Cosmopolitan  Boarding 
and  Baiting  Stable 

Corner  PITTS    and    SOUTH    MARGIN    STS. 

BOSTON,   MASS. 
Stock   Farm,    Andover,    Mass. 


M.  FREDIANI  &  SONS 


WHOLESALE    DEALERS   IN 


Fine    Confectionery 


-and  Salted  Nuts- 


326  Dudley  Street,  Roxbury 

A  Free  Clinic  for  Animals 

OF  THE  POOR 

IS    MAINTAINED    DAILY    FROM 
2   TO    3   O'CLOCK   BY  THE   NEW 

COMMONWEALTH    HOSPITAL 
FOR    ANIMALS 

24   Cummington   Street,    Back    Bay 
Telephone,  Back  Bay  2946 


CLASS  24     OIL    DEALERS 

The  Judges  may  award   such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


388 

Hisgcn  Bros. 

Michael  J.  Shea 

1 

389 

Gulf  Rcfinini);  Co. 

*Charles  A.  Hallett 

1 

390 

George  B.  Phillips 

1 

391 

" 

Anthony  F.  Curran 

2 

392 

" 

*Daniel  C.  Benner 

2 

393 

" 

Patrick  Henshon 

2 

394 

" 

Michael  Terrel 

2 

395 

.. 

*Frank  P.  Kelley 

2 

396 

Fourth 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

Year  in  Parade 

*Alfred  J.  Goddard 

2 

CLASS  25  -MANUFACTURERS 

The  Judges   may  award   such   ribbons,   First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


397  The  American  Agricultural 

Chem.  Co.  Bradley  Fertilizer 
Works 

398  Atwood  &  McManus 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 


399 

" 

Sixth  Year  in 

Parade 

400 

401 

Sixth  Year  in 

Parade 

402 

" 

Fifth  Year  in 

Parade 

403 

" 

404 

" 

405 

Fifth  Year  in 

Parade 

Michael  J.  Moynihan 
William  J.  Oliver 

*John  W.  Luzzatto 

*Ed\vard  W.  Riley 
*William  Arg\- 

*  Joseph  J.  Cronin 

*John  J.  Foley 
Louis  King 
^Oliver  H.  Marion 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


67 


BAKER'S 

Breakfast  Cocoa 

/5  of  Unequaled  Quality 


ESTABLISHED    1841 


For  delicious  natural 
flavor,  delicate  aroma, 
absolute  purity  and 
food  value,  the  most 
important  requisites 
of  a  good  cocoa,  it  is 
the  standard. 

Trade-Mark  On  Every 
Package 

53  Highest  Awards  in 
Europe   and    America 


WALTER  BAKER  &  CO.  LTD. 

Dorchester,  Mass.  Established  1780 


If  you  anticipate  moving  to  REVERE 
or  WINTHROP,  do  not  forget  the 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

which  supplies  electricity  for  light  and 
power  and  gas  for  lighting,  heat- 
ing  and   cooking 

«^        =^       <^ 

suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

Revere  and  Winthrop 


E.   B.   BADGER 
&  SONS  CO. 


«  «  « 

Coppersmiths  and 
$beet  metal  Olorkers 

«  «  « 

Nos.  63  to  75  PITTS  STREET 
BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

FOX   BAKERY 

GENERAL    BAKING 
COMPANY 


\ 


68 


MANUFACTURERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


406  The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

407  " 

408  "  "         "       " 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 


409 


Fellows  &  Son 


410         Flash  Chemical  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

411 

412 


Ginsburg  Bros. 


413  Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Corp. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

414  "  "  -       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

415  Little,  Brown  &  Co. 

416  "         "         "     " 

417  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

418  National  Casket  Co. 
419 

420  Thos.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

421  "       "       " 

422  "       "       " 

423  "       "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

424  "       "         "       " 

425  F.  \V.  Toothaker 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

426  "    " 

427  "    " 

428  Sylvester  Tower  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


^Patrick  J.  O'Brien 

*Charles  Whyte 

*\Villiam  Kenny 
William  H.  Harding 

*Patrick  E.  Burke 
Abraham  Alpert 
Morris  Pearl  man 
Peter  Anastasi 
Henry  Gallagher 
Freeman  R.  Potter 
Daniel  A.  Harrington 

*  Bernard  J.  Fox 

^Alexander  Simoneau 

*George  E.  Bell 

*Timothy  J.  Harrington 
James  Norton 
Michael  Reardon 
Robert  Bradshaw 
Richard  J.  Brinkert 
George  Smith 
Henry  Morris 
*Albert  Murphy 

*Gcorge  E.  Doyle 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


American  Coal 
Company 

376  Albany  Street 

BOSTON 

Telephone,  Tremont  335 


G.  O.  Lanphear 


J.  H.  Elwell 


F.  L.  MOORE  &  CO. 

CrucKmen  ana  forwaraers 

246  Purchase  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone,   Main   7076 

Compliments  of 

MAGEE'S 
EAST  BOSTON 
EXPRESS 

Telephone,  East  Boston  212 

BRASS   SIGNS 
FOR   WAGONS 


C.  H.  BUCK   &    CO. 
52  East  Canton  Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


J.   T.    COILEY 

DEALER  IN 

Fruit  and  Produce 

FRESH  IN  SEASON 

WE   TRY    TO    PLEASE 

Residence,  220  Webster  Avenue 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

V.  TASSINARI  &  CO. 

Successors  to  J.  SCARONI  &  CO. 

IRcgtaurant 

Importers,  Wholesale  and  Retail  Dealers  in 

Italian  ana  f  rcncb  Groceries 

Macaroni,  Cheese  and  Olive  Oil,  Wines  and 
Liquors,   Cigars,    Tobacco    and    Paper    Bags 

NOS.  98,  100  and  102  CROSS  ST.,  BOSTON 

Tel.,  Richmond  1 1 59      Between  Hanover  and  North  Sts. 

JOHN  REARDON  &  SONS 
COMPANY 

AUston  and  \A^averly  Streets 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Cambridge  1849 


Compliments  of 

J.  BURNS 

95  Lexington  Street 

EAST    BOSTON 


Telephone  Connection 


70 


GLASS  26— BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


429  The  Atlantic  Works 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

430  Barbour-Stockwell  Co. 

431  Hyman  Belinsky 

432  George  S.  Densmore 

434  I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

435  "         "  "     " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

436  "         "  "     " 

437  J.  B.  Hunter  &  Co. 

This  horse  has  been  in  service  ten  years 

438  Kiley  Hardware  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

439  Louis  Lucke 

440  W.  F.  Kaulback 

441  McGuinness  &  Mclsaac 

442  The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 


443 

Fourth  Year  in 

Parade 

444 

S. 

Slotnik 

445 

" 

" 

446 

Sa 

m  Steinberg 

447         H. 

Third  Year  in 

Wolpe 

Parade 

*Edward  J.  Sweeney 

Timothy  Burns 

Sam  Shamoth 
^Robert  F.  Quirk 

Anthony  M.  Sylvester 
*John  Silva 

Robert  Stewart 

Frank  Johnson 
*Ernest  Stanton 

Charles  H.  Lucke 

E.  Norton 

Edward  F.  McGuinness 

William  H.  Duddy 
*Edward  M.  Clare 

Jake  Sirota 

Adam  Kootowsky 

Sam  Steinberg 
*Isadore  L.  Wolpe 


•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


71 


Telephone 

M.  J.  SHEA    - 


South  Boston  401 
Manager 


Wilson  Tisdale  Company 

OLD  COLONY 

STABLE 


Working  Horses  and  Wagons 
To  Let  by  the  Day  or  Week 

46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


Compliments   of 


THE 

ATLANTIC 

WORKS 


ELDRIDGE 
BAKER  CO- 


WHOLESALE 

GROCERS 


213=215  State  St.,     Boston 

The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

Wire  Cloths 
&nd  Screens 

Elevator    Cars    and 
Enclosures 

FANCY  WROUGHT  IRON  AND 

BRASS  GRILL  WORK 

3^  Pearl  Street,        BOSTON 

J.  E.  Jacobs,  Mgr.        Tel.,  Fort  Hill  1907 


72 


CLASS  27— METALS  AND    JUNK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

448         E.  B.  Badger  &  Sons  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

Joseph  Small 

1 

449         "     "         "        "     "       " 

Albert  Diehl 

1 

450         "     "         "        "     "       " 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

Michael  Toomey 

2 

451          Morris  Baer 

Nathan  Baer 

1 

452         H.  F.  Brackett  &  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

*Joseph  Harris 

3 

453         Daniel  Davis 

Daniel  Davis 

1 

454         Harry  Ficksman 

John  Rubchinsky 

1 

455         Harry  Frede 

Harry  Frede 

1 

456         Patrick  O'Brien 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

Patrick  O'Brien 

1 

457         Meyer  Rosenthal 

Meyer  Rosenthal 

1 

458 

Ike  Sandler 

Max  Wolk 

1 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


73 


...  BUY... 

CHASE'S 

SUPERFINE   FAWN 
WOOL    SQUARE 

BLANKETS 


Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes  —  Look 
for  the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade-Mark — 
When  buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the 
word 


ii 


CHASE" 


Compliments  of 

W.    A.    Clement 

2159  WASHINGTON  ST. 
ROXBURY 

ESTABLISHED  1841 

W.  P.  STONE  &  GOIEPflNY 

Manufacturers  of 

Wagons,  Caravans  and  Sleds 

Carriage  Painting 

REPAIRING  IN   ALL  BRANCHES 

175  and  179  West  First  Street 
SOUTH    BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

The   Union   Ice   Company 
BOSTON 


A.  SANSONE 


FRUIT 


WHOLESALE   PRICES 
47  Pitts  Street      -        -        -      Boston 

Telephone,  Haymarket  2165-J 
President,  GEO.  H.  BUCK        Treasurer,  DAVID  C.  BUCK 

Eastern  Storage   Co. 

EVERETT   AVE.    AND  MAPLE  ST. 

CHELSEA 

Storage  for  all  kinds  of  Merchandise  and 
Household  Goods. 

Connected  by  spur-track  with  B.  &  M.  R.  R. 

Shipments  made  direct  by  rail  or  by  our  own 
teams. 


74 


CLASS  28— BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second    or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

459 

William  Albrecht 

John  F.  Shaw 

1 

460 

" 

Harry  Hittinger 

2 

461 

u 

H.  R.  Stengel 

2 

462 

" 

Charles  J.  Harrison 

2 

463 

u 

Frank  C.  Mutz 

2 

464 

" 

Robert  W.  Kelm 

2 

465 

Atlantic  Wine  &  Bottling  Co. 

Domenic  Costantino 

466 

<.        u 

Vincent  Tureo 

467 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

*Martin  V.  Haines 

468 

- 

*Charles  A.  Walsh 

469 

"       " 

^Patrick  J.  Cronin 

470 

"       " 

Ignatius  Fettig 

471 

Filippo  Bruno  Co. 

Antonio  Capodilupo 

472 

Third 

473 

Third 
474 

Year  in  Parade 
Year  in  Parade 

*Joseph  Rocco 
*John  Moshillo 
Eugenio  Sticco 

475 

"             " 

*Salvatore  Bruno 

476 

D.  Camelio  &  Co. 

Joseph  Camelio 

477 

"       "    " 

Angelo  Graziano 

478 

James  J.  Doherty 

*Patrick  J.  Dooley 

479 

Crescent  Star  Beverage  Co. 

Augusto  Pierotti 

480 

P.  Dempsey  &  Co. 

*Charles  E.  Williams 

481 

"     " 

*John  J.  Sheehan 

482 

"         "           "     " 

*Timothy  D.  Leary 

•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


75 


Telephone,    Main   1767 

A.A.Rowe&SonCo. 

Forwarding  Agents 

and 

Bonded    Truckmen 

CUSTOM    HOUSE    BROKERS 

32     India    Wharf,     Boston 


Est.  1869 


Inc.   1910 


A.  J.  BARTLETT 

ESTABLISHED     1840 

Commission  Merchant  and  Dealer  in 

Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs  and  Poultry 


7  and  8  No.  Market  St.  and  7  Clinton  St. 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


BEST  GRADES  A  SPECIALTY 


Tel.  Connection 


G.  W.  &  F.  SMITH  IRON  COMPANY 

STRUCTURAL       STEEL 
AND  ARCHITECTURAL 

IRON    WORK 


Offices,  Shops  and  Foundry 

[sland,  Gerard,    Farnham  and  Reading  Streets 

BOSTON,  MASS.,  U.  S.  A. 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

FELLS    ICE 
COMPANY 


ORIGINAL  DIXIE  BRAND 
PEANUT   BUTTER 

AND 

SALTED    PEANUTS 

Manufactured  by 

THE  KELLY  PEANUT  COMPANY 

200  State  Street      .      .     Boston,  Mass. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


Timberlake  &  Small 


NEPONSET 


^nnoisseurs^  i^6 
^rink    (fff^^ 


THEBliiiS 


AND    ROASTED   BY 

SHAPLEIGH  COFFEE  CO, 
BOSTON. 


Telephone,  Brighton  147 

J.  H.  SULLIVAN  COMPANY 
Contractors 

LAKE   ST.,  BRIGHTON 

Corner  Commonwealth  Avenue 


76 


BOTTLERS,    WINE  DEALERS   AND   BREWERS     Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


Joseph  Gahm  &  Son 


483 
484 
485 

486 
487 
488 

Third  Yeai 


489 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

490 


W.J.  Higgins&Co. 


491  "     " 

Eighth  Year  in  Parade 

492  F.  J.  McCarthy  &  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


493 

S. 

3.  Parker  Co. 

494 

Savoy  Wine  &  Importing  Co 

495 

ShawniLit  Wine  Co. 

496 

Herman  Wolf 

497 

Star  Brewing  Co. 

498 

' 

499 

< 

500 

< 

501 

< 

502 

. 

503 

' 

504 

Third  Year  In 

Parade 

505 

" 

506 

.. 

Patrick  J.  C\^lton 
Richard  S.  Cowan 
Charles  Harrison 


Frederick  J.  Wilkins  2 

*George  A.  Forsythe  2 

*Harry  A.  Melendy  2 

George  C.  Griffin  2 

Edward  T.  Flynn 
*Dominick  F.  Lally 
*M.  H.  Burke 
Matthew  J.  Lydon 
Frederick  F.  Pierce 
Emil  J.  Pilliard 
*Charles  N.  Wolf 
Thomas  Riley 

Nicholas  Grealy  2 

*Thomas  McCarthy  2 

William  Dineen  2 

Peter  Maguire  2 

Cornelius  Crowley  2 

James  McNeill  2 

*J.  A.  Morehouse  2 

*Thomas  Griffin  2 

Thomas  Comer  2 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


77 


ESTABLISHED     1872 


DOHERTY    &   DALY 

BOTTLERS  OF 

Mineral  Waters,  Tonics,  Etc. 

SODA    TANKS    A    SPECIALTY 


309  and  311   Albany  Street      = 

TELEPHONE,   TREMONT  1174- M 


Boston,  Mass. 


Turner  Centre  Dairglng 
nssQGiation 

MANUFACTURERS  OF 

FINE   CREAMERY  BUTTER 


P,  Di  Napoli 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 


AND  DEALERS  IN 

SWEET  CREAM 

62  FULTON  STREET 

Boston  Branch.  33  FULTON  ST..  Cor.  CROSS 

Telephone,  Richmond  2575 

Telephone,  Richmond  22155 

1.    L.    SMITH,    MGR. 

D.  S.  WOODBERRY                             R.  S.  WOODBERRY 

D.  S.  WOODBERRY  &  CO. 

COMPLIMENTS 

FORWARDERS 

OF 

247  ATLANTIC  AVENUE                    Room  41 

A  FRIEND 

P.  O.  Box  1284                                       Telephone.  Main  4519 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

78 


CLASS  29— HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


507 

H.  Gorodetzky 

J.  Fish  man 

508 

Landy  Bros. 

John  G.  Brown 

509 

"       " 

Frank  Riemer 

510 

Maiden  Grain  Co. 

Jesse  J.  Withers 

511 

Fulton  O'Brion 

*Daniel  Smiddi 

512 

" 

*Philip  Kelly 

513 

Phelps  Bros. 

Samuel  V.  Lambert 

514 

u 

Robert  L.  Halden 

515         W.  M.  Robinson 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

*M.  F.  Connelly 

516 

Nathan  Tufts  &  Son 

Mike  Curran 

517 

"     "     " 

Robert  McKernan 

518 

<.     <.     « 

A.  A.  McDonald 

3 

519 

David  Wantman 

Arthur  F.  Canning 

1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


79 


New     England's     Largest,     Best 
Lighted   and    Best   Ventilated 

RETAIL    STORE 


A    PLEASANT    PLACE    TO   SHOP 


HENRY   SIEQEL    CO. 


W.  J.  HIGGINS 

Importer    and    Grocer 

128-134  EMERSON  ST. 
SOUTH  BOSTON 

ELM    FARM    MILK    CO. 

Distributers  of  Fine  Dairy  Products 

Pure  Family  and    Nursery  Milk.     The    "Ray" 
Inspected  Milk.     Certified  Milk.    Modified 
Milk.  Bulgarian  Sour  Milk.  Butter- 
milk.    Heavy,   Medium    and 
Light  Cream 

Office  and  Storehouse  at 
WALES    PLACE,    DORCHESTER 

Off  247  Columbia  Road 


J.  H.  WATTS 

Truckman    and   Forwarder 

114  High  Street 


BOSTON 


Telephone,  Main   1577-L 


P.  O.  Address 
GROVE  HALL  STATION,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


J.  T.  Tighe  Company 

BEST    GRADES 
FAMILY   AND   STEAM 


LOWEST    CASH    PRICES 

Wharf,  First  St.  foot  of  F  St.  1  QrvnTu  RnQTONl 
Yard,     331   West  Fourth  St.     P^^'"  ^^^^^^ 

Telephone,  South  Boston  156 


CLASS  30— LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribhons,  First,  Second  or   Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


. 

No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

520 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

Jas.  Blowers 

1 

521 

Third  1 

fear  in  I'arade 

*Louis  Blaine 

1 

522 

Third  -i 

fear  in  Parade 

*Wm.  H.  Sheehan 

1 

523 

Third  "i 

>ar  in  Parade 

*Jos.  F.  Sylvester 

This 

horse  is 

1 
24  years  old 

524 

"                  "            " 

Theo.  S.  Desmond 

2 

525 

Third  ■! 

fear  in  Parade 

nVm.  H.  Burke 

2 

526         Howard  Bros. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

*John  Howard,  Vet.  Driver 

1 

527 

S.  Rose 

*T.  J.  Mansfield 

1 

528 

C.  J.  Larivee  Lumber  Co. 

Michael  Lynch 

1 

529 

Patrick  Quill 

2 

530 

Lawrence  &  Wiggin 

Wm.  Meaney 

1 

531 

"       _  " 

Arthur  Geswell,  Vet 

D 

river 

1 

532 

" 

Edward  Drain 

2 

533 

" 

James  McCarthy 

2 

534 

" 

Wilson  Pike 

2 

535 

The  .A.  T.  Stearns  Ltimber  Co 

0.  H.  T.  Peterson 

2 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


81 


Thomas    Campbell 

TEAIVISTER 

HEAVY    TEAMING     A     ^-PECIALTY 

DEALER  IN 

Edg(estone,    Paving    Blocks,    Foundation  Stone 

and  Crushed  Stone  for  Concrete  Work 

Stable,  79  Vine  St.,  East  Cambridge 


Compliments  of 

National  Casket  Co. 


R.  C.  Toomey 


Geo.  G.  Ormon 


Toomey  &  Ormon 

<I3rocerieg  ant.  Probtgiong 

48  Crescent  Ave.,  985  Dorchester  Ave 
DORCHESTER 

J.    C.    TALBOT 

FANCY    AND    STAPLE 

(Broceiies 


1157  Washington  St.,  Dorchester 


Branch  Store  : 

Associates  Building 


FJ.  McCarthy  &  Co. 
Grocers  and  Tmporters 

FOREIGN     AND     DOMESTIC      LIQUORS 

FOR        FAMILY        AND        MEDICINAL       USE 

Bottlers  of  Lager  Beer  and  all  Kinds  of  Ales  and  Porters 
225  Havre  Street,  East  Boston,  Mass. 

Teleptiune,    East  Boston  30 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

G.    L.    GOULDING,    Prop. 
-ESTABLISHED  1886— 


POPE   BUILDING 

Rooms  29-30-31 

221     Columbus    Avenue 

Telephone,    Tremont  381 


Bain    Brothers   Co. 

Wholesale 
GROCERS 


ESTABLISHED   1815 


240  MILK  STREET,  BOSTON 


FRANK    GNECCO 

THE  NORTHERN 
FRUIT  CO. 


13  Fulton  Street 
BOSTON 

TELEPHONE.  RICHMOND  1328 


82 


CLASS  31— ICE 

The  Judges  may   award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second   or  Third,  as   they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


536 

The  Boston  Ice  Co. 

Stephen  W.  Wilson 

2 

537 

"     " 

M.  A.  Libby 

2 

538 

w     .< 

John  J.  McLellan 

2 

539 

.<     ., 

\\\  C.  Marks 

2 

540 

..     << 

H.  F.  Wilson 

2 

541 

"     .< 

George  T.  Hunter 

2 

542 

"     " 

J.  W.  Allison 

2 

543 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 

Daniel  McLeod 

2 

544 

.. 

Thomas  Doran 

2 

545 

<< 

,  E.  Hinckley 

2 

546 

w 

Frank  Sheffuth 

2 

547 

.. 

Archie  Mclntyre 

2 

548 

Fells  Ice  Co. 

Harold  Cox 

2 

549 

4r 

<<     .. 

William  Wheaton 

2 

550 

"     " 

Guilford  Saunders 

2 

553 

Medford  Ice  Co. 

Hibbard  P.  Guilmette 

2 

554 

Union  Ice  Co. 

*Jos.  J.  Melanson 

2 

555 

"     " 

*John  H.  Wright 

2 

556 

"     " 

*James  B.  McWilliams 

2 

557 

"     " 

*John  A.  Burbine 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TO  SA  VE  TIME  is  to  lengthen  life 

No  up-to-date   housekeeper  uses    wood    nowadays    to    kindle    a   fire. 

The  Standard  Charcoal  Co.'s  hardwood  charcoal,  put  up  in  clean, 
tight  paper  bags,  is  cheaper,  safer  and  more  economical  than  wood  and 
gives   you    a   hot,    glowing    fire    a    few   seconds    after    lighting. 

For  sale  by  all  good  grocers  everywhere.  Sold  also  in  bulk  to 
foundries,  manufacturing    plants,  hotels,  restaurants  and  business   houses   bv 

STANDARD  CHARCOAL  CO.,  ^"o^ERtlLLE" 

TELEPHONE,  SOMERVILLE    80 

LOOK     FOR    THE    NAIVIE    "STANDARD    CHARCOAL"     AND     ACCEPT    NO     SUBSTITUTE 


New  Revere    House 

Will    Open    About 

JULY  1,   1912 
Bowdoin     Square,     Boston 

R.    S.    HARRISON,   Proprietor 

Window   Shades 

MADE  TO  ORDER 

THE  HOYT  COMPANY 

347  BROADWAY,  SOUTH  BOSTON 

443  BROADWAY,  SOUTH  BOSTON 

1246  DORCHESTER  AVENUE,  DORCHESTER 

ESTIMATES  FURNISHED 

Compliments  of 

The 
STAR 
Brewing 
Company 


Tel..   Richmond  1029-M 


CRESCENT  STAR 
BEVERAGE  CO. 

131   ENDICOTT  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


THOMAS  BENSON 
Telephc 


WALTER  W.  BENSON 


Richmond  296 


BENSON  BROTHERS 


DEALERS    IN 


Beef,  Mutton,  Lambjeal,  Pork,  Lard 

Hams,  Bacon,  Sausages,  Poultry 

Game,  Butter 

New  York  Hips,   Tops  and  all  Rattle  Products 

86  NORTH  STREET,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


Compliments 

of 

A    Friend 


84 


CLASS  32— CONTRACTORS 


The  Judges  may   award   such   ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,  as   they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No,  of 
Horses 


558         W.  Loflus  Buckley  W.  Loftus  Buckley      (bronchos)     3 

(These  Irjnchos  were  boug'ht  last  August  and  broken  by  owner) 


559  Geo.  W.  Harvey  Co. 

560  Edward  A.  Janse 
5G1  James  Lo\e 

562  M.J.  McGrail 

563  J.  L.  McCarthy 
564 

565 


\Vm.  A.  Mellish 
Edward  Donnelly 
Frank  X.  Love 
J.  J.  McGrail 
Wm.  J.  McCarthy 
*Fred'k  L.  McCarthy 
Thos.  Scannell 


''Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


/M 


IRON  AND 

COAL 


Austin   Gove    8z:  Son 


Compliments  of 

C.  S.  Johnson 


(INCORPORATED) 


■Dealers    in- 


COAL,  WOOD  AND 
I       MASONS'  SUPPLIES 

I  WHARVES  : 

212  Border  Street,    East  Boston 


c.  B.  smitn  &  bid. 

mUboIesale 
(5rocei8 

AND     WHOLESALE      DISTRIBUTORS 
AND     OWNERS     OF 

STATE  HOUSE  FLOUR 


WILLIAM  KRAUSS 
GROCERIES  and  PRO  VISIONS 

502  EAST  EIGHTH  STREET 
SOUTH  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 


TELEPHONE,   120 


JAMES  F.  LYNCH 

Dealer   in 

BARRELS 

47  to  51  Champney  Street 
SOUTH   BOSTON 

Telephone,  Scuth  Boston  939-R 


Compliments  of 

W.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

24  Custom  House  Street 
BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

JOHN    H.   HANSON 

XEruckman 


104  South  Street, 


Boston 


86 


CLASS  33~COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  Judges   may  award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


566 


567 

Fourth  Year 


568 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

569 


570 

Fourth  Year 


571 

Fourth  Y'ear  in  Parade 


I.  Babcock 


572 
573 
574 
575 
576 
577 


Standard  Charcoal  Co. 


N.  E.  Gas  &  Coke  Co. 


Jos.  W.  Coyne 
Bernard  F.  Gately 

*Jos.  A.  Leach 
Jos.  Mitchell 

*John  L.  Dinan 
John  W.  Doherty 
Harry  Martell 
Jeremiah  J.  Tobin 
James  Allan 
John  Flefferman 
Fred  Allie 
Timothy  OTeary 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


87 


CLASS  34     COAL 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,   as   they  deem   to   be 
.ed. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

578 

American  Coal  Co. 

Guy  Jackson 

1 

579 

"     " 

John  Muri)hy 

2 

580 

"     " 

Thomas  Ward 

2 

Third  Yes 

>r  in  I'arade 

581 

Batchelder  Bros. 

Walter  E.  Thompson 

2 

582 

" 

Geo.  White 

2 

583 

" 

John  Walsh 

2 

584 

Tony  Bertocchi 

Tony  Bertocchi 

585         Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*Barney  Portnoi 

586 

(i                ^l             a             it             n 

Joe  Boronstien 

587 

Dorchester  Coal  Co. 

Patrick  J.  Donnelly 

588 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

*E.  Merritt 

589 

Third  Ye 

ir  in  Parade 

*Patrick  Donahue,  Vet.  Driver         1 

590 

" 

*Edw.  Lyman 

1 

591 

Jan:es  Evans 

1 

592 

"    "          "          " 

*Patrick  Helion 

1 

593 

*Thomas  Burke 

1 

594 

"    "          "          " 

*Jas.  Spikes,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

595 

"    "          "          " 

Jas.  Bland 

2 

596 

*Thomas  Rouse 

2 

597           

Third  Year  in  I'arade 

*Patrick  Welch 

2 

598 

Austin  C^.ove  &  Son,  Inc. 

*Bernard  O'Brien 

1 

599 



W.  S.  Thompson 

1 

600 

Third  Ye 

ar  in  P.irada 

*Ed\\ard  E.  Gallinaugh 

1 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Bad^e 


88 


COAL — Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

601 

Austin  Gove  &  Son,  Inc. 

*Matthew  Schul 

1 

602 

"     " 

*Wm.  Quinn 

1 

603 

Fourth 

Harrison  Coal  Co. 

Year  in  Parade 

*Morris  Greenberg 

1 

604 

B.  S.  Hatch  Co. 

Wm.  Chisholm 

1 

605 

"       " 

Patrick  Fitzsimmons 

1 

606 

"       " 

Patrick  Kinsella 

2 

607 

"       " 

Chas.  Hathaway 

2 

608 

Maiden  Coal  Co. 

Alfred  W.  Barrett 

1 

609 

w 

Neil  Heyland 

2 

610 

u 

Martin  B.  Stead 

2 

611 

u            w 

John  Burris,  Jr. 

2 

612 

Met.  Coal  Co. 

Wm.  Day 

1 

613 

u 

*John  J.  Diiggan 

1 

614 

u 

Patrick  F.  Killion 

1 

615 

u           u 

John  Marshall 

1 

616             "         "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade     , 

*Thomas  Dalton 

1 

617 

" 

Peter  Connolly 

2 

618 

" 

*Jereniiah  Hurley 

2 

619         Harry  Rosenthal 

This  horse  is  twenty-five  years  old 

620 

John  J.  Dawny 
Samuel  Borr 

1 
1 

621 

" 

Lewis  Riback 

2 

622 

" 

Alexander  Webber 

2 

623         The  Stetson  Coal  Co.                     *Wm.  Hearst 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade           ^^  j^g  ^^j,,  ^jj^  ^„  Worse's  back) 

1 

624           "           "           "       " 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

*Michael  O'Neil 

2 

625 

F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co 

Stephen  J.  Craddock 

1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


COAL— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Ho'ses 


G2() 

F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co. 

Thomas  Maloney 

1 

627 

"     ' 

Richard  Conley 

2 

628 

"     "            "       " 

Mark  Hernon 

2 

629 

"     "            "        " 

Michael  Flaherty 

2 

630 

Third 

Year  in  Parade 

*Jas.  Curley 

3 

CLASS  35— OWNERS'  AND  FOREMEN'S  RUNABOUTS 

The  Judges  may  award  a  Silver  Medal   as  First  Prize,   with  Three  Dollars  for  the 
driver;  a    Certificate    and    Two    Dollars    for    the    driver  as  Second   Prize. 
First  and  Second  Prize  horses  to  receive  blue  ribbons. 
"Highly  Commended"  ribbons  may  be  awarded  to  the  remaining  horses. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


631  Thomas  Campbell 
631 A  L  Freedman  &  Co. 

632  N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

633  N.  E.  Gas  cS:  Coke  Co. 

634  C.  B.  Ross 

635  S.  Slotnik 

636  Tilley  &  Brown 

637  John  Reardon  cv  Sons  Co 


Edward  Boyle 

Louis  H.  Steinberg 

^Henry  LaCroix 

I  vers  C.  Cushing 

Walter  Ployer 

(Blind  Horse)    ! 

S.  Slotnik 

John  W.  Taylor 

Mark  Wall 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


90 


CLASS  36— TRUCKMEN 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as   they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

1 

:      638 

Augusta  &  (Oilman 

*Herhert  H.  Oilman 

1 

639 

u               .< 

*Everett  Forbes 

1 

640 

"     "    " 

*Clarence  E.  Pleshaw 

2 

641 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

Edward  Crehan 

1 

642 

"     " 

W.  P.  Meehan 

1 

643 

..     .. 

Walter  Stidstone 

1 

644 

"     " 

David  Walsh 

2 

645 

H.  J.  Baird 

Francis  M.  Sullivan 

1 

646 

Henry  S.  Barron 

William  E.  Driscoll 

1 

647 

.. 

William  A.  Green 

2 

648 

James  R.  Baxter 

James  R.  Baxter,  Jr. 

1 

649 

>.       w       . 

Thomas  F.  Gallagher 

1 

650 

<.            ..            u 

Michael  Kerrigan 

1 

651 

Boston  Blacking  Co. 

Joseph  LeClair 

2 

652 

" 

Joseph  W.  Kelley 

2 

653 

" 

T.  J.  Mulcahy 

1 

654 

C.  Bowen 

Daniel  E.  Cunningham 

1 

655 

u             " 

Michael  F.  Deegan 

1 

656 

"    " 

John  P.  Donohue 

1 

657 

"    " 

Thomas  F.  Maguire 

1 

658 

"     " 

Robert  W.  Foster 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


91 


TRUCKMEN     Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


(J')!) 

C  .  Bowc'ii 

*  Robert  J.  Moran 

1 

660 

"       " 

*Maurice  J.  Donnelly 

2 

661 

.. 

Joseph  P.  Farrell 

1 

662 

"       " 

Walter  P.  Furlong 

1 

663 

"       " 

John  F.  Murphy 

1 

664 

w                .. 

Robert  J.  Verner 

2 

665 

Third 

W.  C.  Bray 

Year  in  Parade 

William  Simpson 

2 

666         J.  W.  Burkett 

'Ihird  Year  In  Para<le 

John  W.  Burkett 

1 

667 

E.  F.  Caldwell 

Charles  W.  White 

1 

668 

Frank  Callahan  &  Co. 

Thomas  Hastings 

1 

669 

Thomas  Campbell 

Frank  Randall 

1 

670 

u 

E.  Boyle 

2 

671 

" 

J.  E.  Duffy 

2 

672 

Wm.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

John  Layhee 

1 

673 

u      u                  u            u    <- 

Aleck  Hood 

1 

674 

"     " 

Ned  Dale 

2 

675 

..     .'             .'         .'  .. 

*Ernest  A.  Miller 

2 

676 

Antonio  (^yroletto  &  Son 

Nicholas  Cyroletto 

1 

677 

Del  lea  Bros. 

John  J.  Dellea 

1 

678 

a               ti 

Charles  F.  Dellea 

1 

679 

" 

Frank  Lomasney 

1 

680 

Samuel  Dillon 

Samuel  Dillon 

1 

*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


92 


TRUCKMEN     Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


G81          Jo.scph  E.  Donnelly 

682  J.  C.  Driscoll 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

683  "     "       " 


684  "     "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

685  Fellows  &  Son 

686  "       "       " 

687  Frank  Gnecco 

688  M.  Goldman 

689  M.  Gordon 

690  Greenberg  &  Co. 

691  John  A.  Hanson 

692  "       " 

693  J.  Harney 

694  E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

695  "     "         "     "       " 

696  "     "         ""     "       " 

697  Timothy  A.  Herlihy 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

698 
699 
700 

701  Jenness  &  Co. 

702  "    "  " 

703  "    "  " 

704  Samuel  Karas 


*James  A.  Carr  1 

*J.  C.  Driscoll,  Jr.  1 

nViUiam  H.  Driscoll  1 

*George  F.  Young  1 

Thomas  W.  Sheehan  1 

*Jeremiah  J.  Donovan  2 

Frank  Gnecco  1 

M.  Goldman  1 

Albert  Jacobs  1 

Robert  Swales  1 

William  R.  Dresser  1 

*\Mlliam  H.  Overy  2 

*Fred  Harney  1 

Samuel  Gould  1 

John  Fenner  2 

*Peter  McDonald  2 

Daniel  Herlihy  1 

*Robert  Herlihy  1 

Henry  Kernes  1 

Daniel  Mahoney  2 

Henry  Murphy  1 

John  McCarthy  2 

Frank  (lately  2 

Samuel  Karas  1 


■Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TRUCKMEN     Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

705 

R.  A.  Kennett 

*Henr>-  Harvey 

1 

7()() 

Third  \ 

ear  in  Parade 

*Ralph  Milliken 

1 

707 

Edward  Bangs 

2 

708 

Third  \ 

'ear  in  Parade 

*Eugene  0.  Slinson 

2 

709 

"    "                 " 

Orin  Larabee 

2 

710 

George  Rowan 

2 

711 

Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade 

*F.  L.  Hitchcock 

2 

712 

"    "                 " 

*Henry  Paul 

2 

713 

*Edward  Ricker 

2 

714 

George  Benham 

2 

71o 

John  T.  Kildiiff 

Harry  Gifford 

716 

-       "       " 

John  T.  Kilduff 

717 

"       "       " 

Steve  Gale 

718 

"       "       " 

*John  Ackerley 

719 

William  Kinnear  &  Son 

Patrick  J.  Hurley 

721 

Jeremiah  F.  Mahoney 

Jeremiah  F.  Mahoney 

722 

Thomas  McEnany 

Thomas  McEnany 

723 

McKee  Bros. 

William  M.  Kirby 

724 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

*\\'illiam  Devine 

725 

..       ..     .. 

*  Frank  X.  Brown 

726 

"  "         "       "     " 

Patrick  J.  Finn 

2 

*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


94 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVERS    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

1     727 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Cornelius  Keefe 

2 

728 

"       "     " 

*James  Donnelly 

3 

729 

George  W.  Nason 

Jack  Callahan 

1 

730 

"       " 

Frank  B.  Nason 

2 

731 

George  Newhouse 

William  H.  Clifford 

2 

732 

" 

John  C.  Young 

2 

733 

Frank  Reavey 

Frank  D.  Rooney 

734 

" 

*Thomas  Reavey 

735 

Frank  Rotondo 

Frank  Bato 

736 

J.  E.  Solomon 

J.  E.  Solomon 

737 

F.  P.  Towle 

William  R.  McMenimen 

738 

E.  G.  Tutein  &  Co.,  Inc. 

Henry  A.  Kenneally 

739 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

*Edward  Di  Stacio 

Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade                                            This  driver 

will  give  an  exhibition  of  driving  without  reins 

740 

*Wm.  F.  Meese,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

Fifth  P. 

irade  for  the  mare  in  this  team 

741 

"    " 

*Fred  M.  Vance 

2 

Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade 

1     742 

J.  H.  Watts 

*  James  H.  Watts 

1 

1     743 

D.  S.  Woodberry  &  Co. 

Edward  P.  Goodrich 

1 

744 

u        u 

George  Vickery 

2 

745 

"  " 

Ernest  F.  Fanjoy 

2 

716 

R.  &  0.  Wood  some 

George  Sharp 

1 

747 

*John  Day 

1 

748 

Charles  Kneeland 

1 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


95 


CLASS  37     FOUR-HORSE  TEAMS 
LAWRENCE  GOLD  MEDAL 

(This  Class  is  restricted  to  teams  taken  care  of  by  the  driver.) 

The  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows:  First  Prize,  Lawrence  Gold  Medal,  to  the 
owner;  Silver  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Second  Prize,  Silver  Medal  to  the 
owner;  Bronze  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Third  Prize,  Certificate  to  the  owner 
and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver;  and  the  Judges  may  also  award  to  the  remaining  entries  such 
ribbons  as  are  deserved,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the  driver. 


N..of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

749 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co. 

Sol  Gireaux 

4 

750 

"       "     " 

Wm.  Lane 

4 

751             "             "       "     "                       *M.  J.  Devereaux 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade                                   Won  the  gold  medal  in  1909 

4 

752 

L  Freedman  &  Co. 

Thomas  Folger 

4 

753          R.  A.  Kennett                                 *Levi  Clark 

Ninth  Year  in  Parade                                  Won  the  gold  medal  in  1910 

The  average  age  of  these  horses  is  seventeen  years 

4 

754 

John  T.  Scully  Foundation  Co 

*Michael  Curran, 

Vet. 

Driver 

4 

Fourth 

Year  in  Parade                               This  team  won 

the  gold  medal  in  1911 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


.96 


CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

These  classes  are  open  only  to  horses  that  have  taken  three  or  more  First  Prizes  in 
previous  parades. 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shiejd  for  the  best  horse,  or  pair,  and  Five  Dollars  for 
the  driver;  and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

The  entries  are  to  be  judged  on  equal  terms;  but  in  case  of  a  tie  the  entrv  which 
has  received  the  greatest  number  of   First  Prizes  will   be  entitled   to   the  Championship. 

CLASS  38-  CHAMPIONSHIF^ 
SINGLES,  LIGHT  HORSES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.o 
Horses 


755  Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

756  Jacob  Bierweiler  &  Son 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

757  Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

758  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

759  "  "         "     " 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

760  City  Laundry  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

761  \\\  J.  Biggins  &  Co. 

Eighth  Year  in  Parade 

762  Louis  Jeselsohn 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 


*John  B.  Fay,  Vet.  Driver 
*Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

James  L.  Kelley 

J.  A.  Close 

Frank  Bellis 

Harry  K.  Thompson 

John  Dinncen 
*Henry  McKenzie 


763          Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Lt.  Co.    Jeremiah  Connors 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


764         Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

I     765         Henry  Siegel  Co. 

I        Sixth  Year  in  Parade 


*G.  Fred  Seamon 
*John  Coy re 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


97 


CLASS  39     CHAMPIONSHIP 

SINGLES,  MIDDLEWEIGHT  OR  WAGON  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  bv  weit^ht,  and  partly  as  doing  their  work   at   a   trot. 
The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

766         The  Atkintic  Works 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*Wm.  T.  Dunbar,  Vet.  Driver          1 

767         C.  Brigham  Co. 

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

^Alexander  McLean                             1 

768         Doherty  &  Daly 

i-ix'h  V.:ir  in  Parade 

*Jos.  H.  Doherty                                  1 

769         Fox  Bakery 

six  til  N'.-:ir  in  Parade 

*Jas.  J.  Welch                                        1 

770         M.  D.  Geaney 

^'onrili  \ear  in  Parade 

M.  D.  Geaney                                      1 

771         Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

Heveiitli  Year  in  Parade 

*Jas.  Hagerty                                         1 

772         B.  F.  Keith 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*Maurice  J.  Flynn                                1 

773         T.  F.  Nealon 

Fourih  Year  in  Parade 

J.  B.  Nealon                                         1 

774         Harry  D.  Smith 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

Harry  D.  Smith                                   1 

775         D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

*Heni-y  L.  Fallon                                  1 

4 


''Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  40— CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES,  MIDDLEWEIGHT  OR  WAGON  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  by  weight  and  partly  as  doing  their  work  at  a  trot. 
The  prize  is   a  Championship  Shield  for  the   horses  and  Five  Dollars   for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

776         C.  Brigham  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*Robert  E.  Colter 

2 

777         F'ox  Bakery 

'I'enth  Year  in  Parade 

Arthur  W.  Bramble 

2 

778         D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*G.  H.  Brown 

2 

779           "         "       "     " 

Kighth  Year  in  Parade 

*Clayton  E.  Everton 

2 

CLASS  41— CHAMPIONSHIP 

SINGLES,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is   a  Championship  Shield   for  the   horse  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.o 
Horses 


*Chas.  G.  Vaughn 
*John  Arclereon 
M.  Murray 
*Gcorge  F.  Jgmes 
*DanieI  E.  Foley 


780  A.  J.  Bartlett 

Fourth   Year  in  Parade 

781  Boston  Industrial  Home,  Inc. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

782  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

783  A.  W.  Knight 

Eiglith  Year  in  Parade 

784  Maiden  Electric  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  I'arade 

785  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Lt.  Co.     Patrick  HefTernan 

Fifth  Year  in  I'arade 

786  F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

787  Fulton  O'Brion 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

788  D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

789  F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co.     *John  Arnold 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 


^Gilbert  H.  McWiUiams 
*Cla\elle  Jes?on 
John  A.  Carr 


790  J.  H.  Watts 

Fourth  Year  in  I'arade 

791  Weliber  &  Co. 

Ninth  Year  in  Parade 


=Allen  C.  Nelson 
= Remus  Burt 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  42— CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES  AND  UPWARDS,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horses  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
an  1  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 

Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


792  American  Coal  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

793  Atwood  &  McManus 

Tenth  Year  in  I'arade 

794  "       " 

Ninth  Year  in  Parade 

795  "       " 

Ninth  Year  in  Parade 

796  Bain  Bros.  Co. 

Fourth  Y'ear  in  Parade 

797  Batchelder  Bros. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

798 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

799  W.  C.  Bray 

Eighth  Year  in  Parade 

800  

Seventh  Year  in  Parade 

801  Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

802  R.  A.  Kennett 

Ninth  Year  in  Parade 

803  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

804  Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

805 

Ninth  Year  in  P.-xrade 

806  Fulton  O'Brion 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

807  Standard  Oil  Co. 

Sever.th  Year  in  Parade 

808  F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co, 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


*Fred'k  Jackson 
*Thos.  Barrett 
*Wm.  H.  Bryson 
*Edward  Bryson 
*John  L.  Callahan 
*John  L.  Thomas 
*John  F.  Regan 
*W'm.  Parrott 
*Fred  Feyler 
Charles  Mackes 
*Elwood  Demerritt 
*J()hn  J.  (lilligan 
^Christopher  F.  Willard 
*Patrick  White 
*  Ed  ward  Murphy 
*John  T.  StCAvart 
*\\'illiam  Fotherbee 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


100 


ENAMELED  IRON  SIGNS 

THE  BALTIMORE  KIND 

Waterman  kLeavitt 

107  EUSTIS  ST.,  BOSTON ,  IVlASS. 


Compliments  of 


P.  J.  DONOVAN 


FRIEND  STREET, 


BOSTON 


LITTLE,  BROWN  &  CO. 

ant) 
34  BEACON  STREET 


RED    ACRE    FARM 


THE  HOME  FOR  HORSES 


Twenty-five  miles  from  Boston 


Telephone,  West  Acton  8 


Railroad  Station  and  Post  Office,  South  Acton 


Any  horse  may  be  sent  to  the  Farm  at  any  time,  with  or 
without   notice. 

Apply  for  information  at  the  office  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association,  15  Beacon  Street,  Room  27. 


101 


CLASS  43     OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  A 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 

Second  Prize:   Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

T^hird  Prize:    Three  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Fourth,  Fifth  and  Sixth  Prizes:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Yeais  of 
Service 

809 

810 

Red  Acre  Farm 

This  horse  worked  in  the  Police 
ville  twelve 

J.J.  Kenney 

C.  Lund 

Ambulance  of  the  City  of  Somer- 
years 

Thomas  Kenney 

Tom 

<Not  in  compeli(ion) 

Charlie 

20 
15 

12 
10 

811 

T.  G.  Plant  Co. 

Wm. '^Russell 

Maggie 

15 

10 

812 

Patrick  Htirley 

John  Palmer 

Rabbit 

15 

10 

813 

.. 

James  McDermott 

Dolly 

16 

10 

814 

Dellea  Bros. 

John  J.  McCormack 

Jem 
Joe 

16 
19 

10 
11 

815 

Louis  Greenberg 

*Louis  Greenberg 

Babe 

17 

11 

81() 

Maklen  Electric  Co. 

Louis  E.  White 

Major 

16 

11 

817 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

Patrick  McCartey 

Major 

15 

11 

818 

Chapin  &  Adams  Co. 

*Wm.  S.  Wilson 

Billy 

15 

11 

819 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

*\\'m.  Fitzsimons 

Tobe 

15 

11 

820 

822 

A.  F.  Carpenter 
W.  A.  Clemen  1 

Charles  White, 

Vet.  Driver 

Frank  Sullixan 

Rich.  II 

(Part  Arabian) 

John 

17 
22 

11 
10 

823 

Boston  P'orge  Co. 

*Wm.  B.  Smith, 

Vet.  Driver 

Jerry 
Tom 

17 
17 

12 
12 

824 

Standard  Oil  Co. 

*Chas.  C.  ( Trover 

Pete 
Bill 

18 
18 

12 
12 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


102 


CLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  B 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 

Second  Prize:   Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Fourth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended  "  ribbons,  \i^ith  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of   No   of 
Ribbon     Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

825 

Brighton  Public  Market 

^Andrew  A.  CunnifT 

Kitty 

17 

13 

826 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

*Geo.  J.  Farrell 

Kate 

18 

13 

827 
828 
829 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 
F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 
Jas.  H.  Woods 

John  J.  O'Neil 
Martin  Cunningham 
Edward  Dix 

Babe 

Donald 
Florence 

(Not  In  competition) 

DolHe 

19 
19 

21 

13 
13 

12 

832 

J.  E.  Moran  &  Co. 

Bernard  Cronin 

Dolly 

21 

13 

833 

Chas.  Dailey 

John  Manley 

Warren 

21 

13 

834 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

*John  F.  Shea 

Jim 

20 

14 

835 

W.  M.  Fiske 

W.  M.  Fiske 

Babe 

20 

14 

836 

H.  W.  Murphy 

Henry  T.  Leary 

Dick 

25 

14 

837 

J.  A.  Link 

James  J.JjWinn 

Frank 

19 

16 

838 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

John  W.  Richardson 

Babe 

19 

15 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


103 


CLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  C 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 

Second  Prize:   Four  Dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fourth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many"Highly  Commended  "  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


SiW„^ 

ESi? 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse. 

'ix: 

839 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

Henry  Unglmach 

Mabel 

21 

16 

840 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

*David  Alton 

Babe 
Johnson 

21 

16 

841 
842 

Chase's  Express 
Geo.  H.  Matthes 

*M.  P.  Durand 
*Alexander  Doherty 

Blind 

Aggie 
Maggie 

23 
25 

16 
17 

843 

Timberlake  &  Small 

*Ralph  B.  Eames 

Old  Jack 

26 

17 

844 

Otto  E.  Zaugg 

*Henry  Sheehan 

Ginger 

28 

12 

845 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

nVm.  P.  Burke 

Tom 
Harry 

30 
24 

10 
10 

846 

Patrick  Hurley 

James  Hurley 

Bob 

19 

15 

847 

Dennis  Doyle 

Dennis  Doyle 

Kitty 

20 

15 

848 

W.  M.  Robinson 

J.  A.  Ryan 

Bob 

20 

15 

849 
850 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 
J.  L.  McCarthy 

*John  F.  Connors, 

Vet.  Driver 
Walter  Ryan 

Frank 
Bob 

20 
22 

15 
15 

851 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

*John  E.  Marcou 

Billy 

20 

16 

852 

W.  C.  Bray 

*Nathan  P.  Teague 

Frank 

20 

16 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


104 


CLASS  43     OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  D 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 
Second  Prize:   Four  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Third  Prize:  Three  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fourth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 
Sixth  Prize:   Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

"«^ 

Years  of 
Service 

853 
854 

H.  F.  Brackett 
Chas.  S.  Johnson 

*Billy  W.  Webb, 

Vet.  Driver 
Frank  J.  Coon 

Billy 
Fannie 

21 
21 

16 
16 

855 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

*John  J.  Magner 

Rose 

21 

16 

856 

Parker  Masters  Co. 

Jos.  A.  Ryan 

Maud 

22 

15 

857 

Chas.  S.  Johnson 

Daniel  J.  Sheehan 

Jessie 

22 

16 

858 
859 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 
W.  R.  Dixon 

*Wm.  B.  Loud 
W.  R.  Dixon 

Jumbo 

ThrsborsehasbeeDin 
every  parade 

Daisy 

23 

28 

16 
15 

860 

J.J.  Duffley 

*Richard  P.  Dufifley 

Dick 

32 

14 

861 

Barry  Bldg.  Wreck.  Co. 

*James  Shealey 

Jack 

32 

16 

862 

Timothy  Shuckrowe 

*Mich'l  J.  Shuckrowe 

Kate 

23 

18 

863 

B.  S.  Hatch  Co. 

Thomas  Roach 

Pete 

23 

18 

864 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

*Cornelius  Ahern 

Billy 

25 

18 

865 

F.  C.  Warren  & 
Bradford  Co. 

Henry  J.  Manley 

Billy 

26 

18 

866 

Dorchester  Ice  Co. 

*W.  C.  Jenkins 

Lord 
Tennyson 

21 

19 

867 

J.  Bierweiler 

*J()hn  Brown 

Kate 

24 

19 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


105 


CLASS  43-OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  E 

First  Prize:   Gold  Medal,  offered  by  the  Mass.  Society  for  the  Prevention   of  Cruelty 
to  Animals. 

Second  Prize:  Five  Dollars,  offered  by  Fred  L.  Jordan. 

I'hird  Prize:  Four  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fourth  Prize:   Three  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Fifth  Prize:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

Sixth  Prize  :  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  the  Association. 

In     addition,     the     Judges     may     award    so    many    "Highly     Commended"    ribbons, 
with  prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entiy 

868 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

Wm.  F.  Hull 

Wm.  F.  Hull 

Fannie 

30 

18 

869 

Ginn,  Whittle  &  Co. 

A.  L.  DeRocher 

Kitty 

25 

20 

870 

Howard  Bros. 

Thos.  Howard 

Bess 

25 

20 

871 
872 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

J.  J.  McNamara&Co. 

*Edward  J.  Tew, 

Vet.  Driver 
*F.  J.  Fitzsimmons 

Lizzie 
Dan 

27 
27 

21 
22 

873 

C.F.Hovey  Co. 

John  M.  Rogers 

Major 

29 

19 

874 

W.  C.  Bray 

Everett  Mclntire 

Peggy 

27 

22 

875 

C.  Bowen 

Chas.  H.  McCarthy 

Tom 

28 

21 

876 

C.  B.  Smith  cS:  Bro. 

*Robt.  F.  Atwood 

White 
John 

28 

23 

877 

Standard  Charcoal  Co. 

John  McCarty 

Dick 

31 

25 

878 

The  Hoyt  Co. 

Adolph  Casper 

Ben 

32 

18 

879 

M.  E.  Bearse 

John  J.  Tennihan 

Nell 

31 

20 

880 

1-rank  P.  Dyer 

Franl-  P.  D>er 

John 

38 

12 

881 

Mrs.  Daniel  Cronin 

*John  A.  Cronin 

Jack 

31 

27 

882 

Jenness  (S:  Co. 

Chris.  Lorenson, 

Vet.  Driver 

Black 
Jack 

39 

34 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


106 


CLASS  44     CHAMPION  OLD  HORSES 


In   this  Class,  Mr.  George  W.  Harrington  offers  a   First    Prize  of  Ten   Dollars;  Mr. 
Wm,  D.  Quimby  offers   a  Second  Prize   of  Five  Dollars, 


No    of 
Ribbon 

No  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

Horse's  Name 

X>' 

Years  of 
Service 

883 

884 
885 

James  F.  Weir                             Fred  E.  Weir                      Ned                38 

(Not  in  competition) 
This   horse   won  the  Gold  Medal   for  old  horses  in  1905,  and  a    Blue    Ribbon   in   the 
Provision  Class  in  1906  and  1907.      He  won   the  Championship  Prize  for  old 
horses  in  the  years  1908,   1909,   1910  and  1911. 

Michael  Shea                             *Frank  H.  Buckley              Doctor           30 

Alonzo  E.  Winn                         Alonzo  E.  Winn                 Chubby         30 

27 

25 
24 

CLASS  45     RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

This  Class  is  for  horses  once  broken  down,  by  over-work  or  neglect  or  abuse,  and 
restored  to  health  and  strength  by  the  present  owner. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  and  the  following  special  prizes: — 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  a  "Friend  to  Animals." 

Second  Prize:   Bronze  Medal  and  Three  Dollars. 

Third  Prize:   Three  Dollars. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


8So         S.  H.  Appleman  A.  Davis  1 

Bought  for  $167.00  four  months  ago.      Has  been  offered  $350.00. 

887  Batchelder  Bros.  Samuel  I.  Snowden  2 

Frank  has  gained  300  lbs.  in  the  two  years  the  firm  has  owned  him. 

888  Doherty  &  Daly  Michael  Daly  1 

This  horse  was  bought  as  a  iiallcy  horse,  that  could  not  be  made  to  work.      He  had  been 

abused  and  beaten,  and  carried  a  scar  in  his  head  where  he  had  been  struck  by 

the  last  driver.      By  patience  and  kind  treatment  the  horse  has  now 

become  one  of  the  best  horses  that  his  present  owners  ever  had. 


889    John  A.  Hanson  John  A.  Hanson 

Bought  sore  and  thin,  weighing  1150  lbs.       Veterinary  surgeon  advised  killing 
him.     He  now  weighs  1450  lbs. 


890         Henry  H.  Ohrenberser  Henry  J.  Phelan  1 

'I'his  horse  was  bought  for  a  song  from  the  Boston  Fire  Department  five  or  six  years  ago 

after  an  accident  in  which  his  mate  was  killed  and   he  was  badly  hurt. 

Owner  would  not  take  $1000.00  for  him  today,  he  says 

— in  fact  would  not  sell  him  at  any  price. 


891         C.  E.  Osgood  Co. 

Bought  five  years  ago  for  $85.00. 
purchased.  1150  1 


892 


Frederick  Wm.  Pa\itt 


William  Heffernan 
Refused  $200.00  since.     Weight  when 
i.       Nineteen  years  old. 

Frederick  Wm.  Pavitt 


107 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  46— BARREL  RACKS 

The  Judges   may   award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second   or   Third,  as  they   deem    to    be 
deserved. 

A  friend  offers  two  prizes  of  $2.50  each,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver  ;  and  the  Asso- 
ciation offers  two  more  prizes  of  the  same  amount,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 

James  Forgie's  Sons  offer  a  handsome  street  blanket,  to  go  to   the   owner  of  the   best 
horse  in  this  class. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


898  J.  M.  Orenson 

894  A.  Beaumont  &  Co. 

895  Wm.  Corbett 

896  Eugene  P.  Gormley 

897  James  F.  Lynch 

898  Daniel  F.  Sheehan 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

899  William  J.  Welch 

900  John  W.  Whitney 
901 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

902 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

903 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


Harr>-  Moore 
T.  W.  Kenney 
"Samuel  S.  Corbett 
Eugene  P.  Gormley 
James  B.  Lynch 
Daniel  F.  Sheehan 
William  J.  Welch 
Thomas  F.  Bannister 
John  F.  Carney 
John  F.  Doherty 
George  A.  Younker 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


108 


CLASS  47— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  A 


The  Judges   may   award   such   ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six    special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

904 

Abbott  &  Miller 

*Charles  H.  Newton 

905 

" 

A.  M.  Rogers 

906 

Salvatore  Andolino 

Tony  Marino 

907 

" 

Paul  Andolino 

908 

" 

John  Smith 

909 

Fred  A.  Blank 

Fred  A.  Blank 

910 

"     " 

John  H.  Blank 

911 

B.  B.  Freight  «S:  Express  Co. 

James  Gatighan 

912 

Joseph  Kilduff 

2 

913 

*Thomas  J.  Gaughan 

2 

914 

*Thomas  Murtagh 

2 

915 

Boyd  Transportation  Co. 

James  F.  McHugh 

916 

u 

Herbert  A.  Lea 

917 

" 

John  P.  McHugh 

918 

Thomas  M.  Callahan 

*Charles  T.  Callahan 

919 

" 

Thomas  M.  Callahan 

920 

Carter  Russell  Co. 

*Stephen  Peters 

921 

Joseph  Celata 

Joseph  Celata 

922 

Joseph  Centorrino 

Joseph  Centorrino 

923 

Chase  Express  Co. 

M.  Hughes 

924 

" 

H.  O'Neil 

925 

" 

James  H.  Forbes 

926 

" 

F.  P.  Coakley 

927 

"           "           " 

*Roy  A.  Heitman 

'^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


109 


CLASS   47— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


928 

H.  K.  Cushing's 

Express 

William  T.  Hickey 

929 

Charles  Dailey 

Daniel  Fallon 

930 

" 

Warren  Dailey 

981 

" 

nVilliam  W.  Thayer 

932 

" 

Alexander  A.  Turlcy 

933 

" 

Frank  McDonald 

934 

Florindo  Diorio 

Florindo  Diorio 

935 

Fourth 

Joseph  B.  Dol liver 

Year  in  Parade 

*George  EJDolliver 

936 

Fourth 

Dorr's  Express 

Year  in  Parade 

*H.  F.  Baker 

937 

P.  Falcucci 

-       P.  Falcucci 

938 

C.  N.  Fitz 

John' Christie 

939 

Alexander  Garie 

py 

Wm.  J.  Thompson 

940 

" 

J.  WilliamJLeidinger 

941 

W.  L.  Hallett 

Thomas  F.  Roche 

942 

S.  Hill 

S.  Hill 

943 

Howe  Co. 

Richard  A.  Fersoni 

944 

,.       " 

Joseph  Jerardi 

945 

" 

Alfred  Hoyle 

946             "       " 

Sixth  Year  in   Parade 

*Edward  T.  Earle 

947             "       " 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

*Alfred  W.  Skidmore 

2 

948 

" 

John  F.  DeMone 

2 

949 

John  Herbert 

John  Herbert 

1 

950 

Samuel  Kaplan 

Samuel  Kaplan 

1 

951 

Levovsky's  Express 

Philip  Lcvovsky 

1 

•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


110 


CLASS  47— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  ma}'  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second -or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
;o  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


952  William  Mahoney 

953  Magee  Express  Co. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

954  "         "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


955 
956 
957 
958 
959 


McCarthy  Bros. 

McKee's  Hiiigham  Exprese^ 
John  T.  McLaughlin 


9()0         Michael  J.  Mulcahy 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

961 
962 
963 
964 
965 
966 
967 
968 
969 
970 
971 
^972 
973 
974 


Manuel  F.  Munise 
George  W.  Nason 
Parker's  Dedham  Express 
Henry  Roach 
Morris  Rothberg 
Frank  Rotondo 

Savage  &  Son 
Timothy  Shuckrowe 
Serafino  Semenza 
I.  Slotnik 
Agel  Spiller  Co. 

B.  ZifT 


975         Gioacchino  Zollo 

Third  Year  in  Parade 


C.  W.  Tolman 
^Bertram  A.  Milroy 

*Harry  Miller 

*C.  W.  Magee 
Timothy  Moynihan 
Edward  Carroll 
Samuel  Goldberg 
John  T.  McLaughlin 

*John  E.  Mulcahy 

Joseph  Martin 

M.  M.  Joyce 
*Fred  Hunter 

Henry  Roach 

Morris  Rothberg 

H.  E.  Coobs 
*Sam  Coleman 

William  D.  Higgins 

Patrick  H.  Doyle 

Serafino  Semenza 

L  Slotnik 

Miskell  Galant 

Jacob  Suster 

B.  Ziff 

Gioacchino  Zollo 


111 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  48— HUCKSTERS 


DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


976 


G.  Anastasi 


977          Peter  Apostolu 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


978 


N.  Bornstein 


979  George  C.  Bougopoulos 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

980  "       " 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

981 


982 
983 
984 
985 
980 
987 


Bournazos  Bros. 

J.  Burns 

William  G.  Burrows 

Edward  A.  Campbell 
Louis  Camuzis 
T.  Chakonas  Co. 


988 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

989  John  T.  Coiley 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

990  Patrick  A.  Conlin 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

991 


992 
993 
994 


Harry  Cuttler 
A.  P.  Dexter 
A.  Di  Angelis 
John  L.  Duffley 


995  John  Feroli 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

996  Charles  Flanders 


997 


Leo  J.  Fitzpatrick 


S.  Anastasi 
Peter  Apostolu 

N.  Bornstein 
*N.  C.  Bougopoulos 

Peter  Demakis 

*Nicholas  Bournazos 
Joseph  Burns 
John  E.  Burrows 
William  J.  Burrows 
Edward  A.  Campbell 
Louis  G.  Camuzis 
Nick  Pegapoulos 
John  Voulgaris 

*William  J.  Coiley 

Patrick  A.  Conlin 


This  horse  is  25  years 


Harry  Cuttler 
A.  P.  Dexter 
Joe  Campanelli 
John  L.  Duffley 
John  Feroli 

Charles  Flanders 
Patrick  W.  Fitzpatrick 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


112 


CLASS  48     HUCKSTERS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  d(em  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


998       Thomas  Ford 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

999 

Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

1000  E.  Garvariles 

1001  S.  Grishaver 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

1002  E.  W.  Harrington 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

1003  "     " 

Fifth  Year  in  Parade 

1004 
1005 
1006 
1007 
1008 
1009 
1010 
1011 


John  J.  Harrington 
Samuel  Higer 
W.  G.  Holbrook 
Thomas  J.  Kennedy 
J.  Kosofsky 
William  Ladas 
Kiven  J.  Lovvry 
Anton  Marcolefas 


1012  Daniel  McLaughlin 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

1013  S.  Mercurio 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

1014  Eugene  D.  Monahan 

1015  Patrick  Moynihan 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

1016  John  Nicholson 

1017  Thomas  Nicholson 

1018  Cornelius  OTeary 

1019  D.J.  OTeary 


Talking  horse 


*Frank  Eustis 

This 

Thomas  Ford 
E.  Garvariles 
M.  Alexander 
*Rupert  G.  Banks 
*Ralph  E.  Harrington 
John  J.  Harrington 
Arthur  Fitzgibbons 
Warren  G.  Holbrook 
Albert  E.  Hubert 
Peter  Murphy 
Harry  Mastropoulas 
Kiven  J.  Lowry 
Atiton  Marcolefas 
John  P.  McLaughlin 
S.  Mercurio 
David  Rowe 
*  Joseph  E.  Moynihan 
James  Nicholson 
Joseph  H.  Nicholson 
Cornelius  OTeary 


D.  J.  OTeary 

This  horse  is  20  years  old.     Owner  driven  her  16  years 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


113 


CLASS   48— HUCKSTERS 

DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1020 

Alexander  McDonald 

1021 

Pappas  Bros. 

1022 

Albah  W.  Penney 

1023 

Alfred  H.  Pigott 

1024 

George  A.  Politis 

1025 

Frank  Rotondo 

1026 

Eli  Rubin 

1027 

Myer  Ruchkofsky 

1028 

A.  Sansone 

1029 

Joseph  Satter 

1030 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

1031 

" 

1032  Henry  Shaievitz 

1033  S.  Silk 

1034  Mark  H.  Simonds 

Fourtli  Year  in  Parade 

1035 
1036 
1038 
1039 


Frank  A.  Spadaro 

Samuel  Sulkin 
Henry  H.  Wolk 


1040  Peter  Wolk 

Fourth  Year  in  Parade 

1041  Joseph  C.  Woods 

Third  Year  in  Parade 

1042  Fred  Yeatanis 


Alexander  McDonald 
*M.  Parrish 

Albah  W.  Penney 

Alfred  H.  Pigott 

John  Politis 
*P.  A.  Coombs 

Eli  Rubin 

Joseph  Ruchkofsky 

A.  Sansone 

Joseph  Satter 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

Edward  Mclntire 
Hyman  Belson 
S.  Silk 
Mark  H.  Simonds 

John  Paladino 
Frank  Spadaro 
Samuel  Sulkin 
Walter  S.  Willis 
*Hyman  Wolk 

*  Rand  all  Wood 

Fred  Yeatanis 


♦Entitled  tu  Driver's  Badge 


114 


DEALERS'  CLASSES 

These  classes   are  open   to    all    dealers    in    horses.     The  horses  will    be    judged    in 
competition,  and  special  ribbons  will  be  awarded. 


CLASS  49— DEALERS'   HORSES 
SINGLES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1043  Myer  Abrams 

1044  A.  J.  Furbush 

1045  H.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

1046  McKinney  Brothers 


CLASS  50     DEALERS'  HORSES 
DOUBLES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1047  Myer  Abrams 

1048  A.  J.  Furbush 

1049  H.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

1050  McKinney  Brothers 


ERRATUM 

On  page  61,  entry  No.  353,  Daniel  Leighton  should  read  Daniel  Singleton. 


115 


STABLE   INSPECTION 


FIRST    PRIZE 


Stables 

Atlantic  Works 
AtAvood  &  McManus 
J.  Bierweiler  &  Son 
Boston,  City  of 

Public  Works  Dept., Paving  Div., Highland  St.,Rox. 

Street  Cleaning  Division,  Highland  St.,  Roxbury 

Sewer  Dept.,  Albany  St. 

Sanitary  Division,  North  Grove  St. 

Medford  St.  Stable,  Charlestown 
Boston  Elevated  Railway,  Gainsborough  St.  Stable 

Boston  Elevated  Railway,  Camden  St.  Stable 

Boston  f]levated  Railway,  Dorchester  Ave.  Stable 

Boston  Elevated  Railway,  Baldwin   St.  Stable,  Camb. 

Boston  Elevated  Railway,  Somerville  Stable 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  Lamartine  St.  Stable 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  294  Rutherford  Ave. 

W.  C.  Bray 
C.  Brigham  Co. 

Carter's  Ink  Co. 
John  J.  Defifern 
Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 
C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 
A.  Edgcomb 
General  Baking  Co. 

Fox  Bakery 

Ferguson  Bakery 
I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

Jos.  Gahm  &c  Son 
Austin  Gove  &  Son 
Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 
Magee  Express  Co. 
Maiden  Electric  Co. 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 


Foremen  and  Nightmen 

Wm.  T.  Dunbar,  Foreman 
John  Redmond,  Foreman 
Charles  Campbell,  Foreman 

J.  K.  Crowley,  Foreman 
J.  Kelly,  Foreman 
W.  Lowe,  Foreman 
John  F.  Coffey,  Foreman 
Charles  Jacobs,  Foreman 
John  J.  Cushing,  Foreman 
W.  Gourley,  Nightman 
Chas.  Dillon,  Foreman 
Patrick  Craven,  Nightman 
James  Carey,  Foreman 
Patrick  Whalen,  Nightman 
Frank  Sturtevant,  Foreman 
Wm.  Carter,  Nightman 
John  E.  Dempsey,  Foreman 
John  Scannell,  Nightman 
Lewis  Smith,  Foreman 
Albert  Corbett,  Nightman 
John  Huessey,  Foreman 
Fred  Downs,  Nightman 
Everett  Mclntire,  Foreman 
John  R.  Kenney,  Foreman 
Adelbert  Garland,  Nightman 
Wm.  Kenney,  Foreman 

Michael  Bradley,  Foreman 
Thos.  Rouse,  Foreman 
E.  Littlefield,  Foreman 

J.  I.  Brooks,  Foreman 
Peter  Freeley,  Foreman 
L.  H.  Steinberg,  Foreman 
Daniel  Robinson,  Nightman 
Dennis  Healey,  Foreman 
Richard  Austin,  Foreman 
M.  J.  Commins,  Foreman 
M.  J.  Whalen,  Foreman 
Jos.  Reardon,  Foreman 
Frank  Crowe,  Nightman 
Henry  LaCroix,  Foreman 


116 


STABLE  INSPECTION— Continued 


FIRST   PRIZE— Continued 


Stahles 
U.K.  Page 
A.  G.  Robinson 
Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 
C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co. 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

Walworth  Manuf.  Co. 

J.  W.  Whitney 
Jos.  C.  Woods 
John  Wright 


Foremen  and  Nightmen 
Archie  Darragh,  Foreman 
S.  C.  Robinson 

Robert  F.  At  wood,  Foreman 
Edward  E.  Chute,  Asst. 
James  Hurst,  Foreman 
Albert  Schroeder,  Foreman 
M.  J.  Shea,  Foreman 
Thos.  Mutch,  Asst. 
Daniel  Shea,  Asst. 
Thos.  Mooney,  Foreman 
Daniel  B.  Sewell,   Nightman 


SECOND    PRIZE 


Stables 
Batchelder  Bros. 


Boston,  City  of 

Public  Works  Dept.,SanitaryDiv.,  Highland  St.,  Rox. 

Boston  Consolidated  Gas  Co. 

Freeport  Street  Stable,  Dorchester 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  330  Rutherford  Avenue,  Charlestown 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  Farnham  Street  Stable 

Boston  Ice  Co.,  West  1st  Street,  South  Boston 

Arthur  W.  Cushing 
Eastern  Storage  Co. 
John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 
Simon  Bros. 
Herman  Wolf 


Foremen  and  Nightmen 

Thomas    F.    Harding,    Foreman, 

1st  Prize 
Thomas  Noble,  Nightman,  1st  Prize 

W.  Clark,  Foreman 
James  Jennings,  Nightman 

Jas.  Meeham,  Foreman,  1st   Prize 

Jas.  Jennings,  Nightman,  1st  Prize 

John  R.  Kenney,  Foreman 

Jerry  Mahoney,  Foreman 

Wm.  Johnson,  Foreman,  1st  Prize 

Alex.  AlcCree,  Nightman,   1st  Prize 

C.  C.  McLean,  Foreman 

Clarence  Webb,  Nightman 

Wm.  Hawley,  Foreman,  1st  Prize 

Jas.  McLaughlin,  Nightman, 1st  Prize 

Brigham   P.  Fay,  Foreman 
Mark  Wall,  Foreman,  1st  Prize 
J.  A.  Simon 


117 


QUALITY   IN   WORK -HORSES 


Our  judges  are  instructed  not  to  award 
blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  to  any  horse,  no 
matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is 
a  horse  of  good  type  and  f]uality.  Quality, 
it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in 
a  work-horse  as  in  a  race-horse.  Quality 
might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness 
of  texture  which  good  breeding  produces. 
The  bone  in  a  well-bred  horse  is  more 
dense  and  less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a 
coarse-bred  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course, 
that  well-bred  horses  are  sometimes  defi- 
cient in  (luality,  but  no  horse  has  quality 
unless  he  is  well-bred.  The  horse  with 
(juality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less 
subject  to  disease  and  to  unsoundness  of 
feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse. 
Consequently  it  is  more  humane  to  use 
liorses  with  quality  than  those  without 
([uality. 

Quality  and  beauty  are  usually  found 
together,  and  yet,  as  all  horsemen  know, 
one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A  horse 
may  have  quality  without  being  in  the 
least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may  have 
a  ewe  neck,  a  large  head,  long  ears,  a 
Roman  nose,  a  sway  back,  flat  sides,  slack 
loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a  rat  tail ; 
and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silky,  if  his 
head  though  large  is  bony  and  well-cut,  if 
his  ears  though  long  are  well-shaped,  if  his 
legs  are  flat  and  clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are 
of  fine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has 
quality.  Horses  of  the  Shire  and  Clyde 
breeds  often  look  coarse  at  first  sight  on 
account  of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy 
legs,  but  in  the  best  specimens  of  these 
breeds,  the  long  hair  about  the  fetlock  is 
fine  and  silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not 
handsome,  are  clean-cut. 

Quality  is  thus  described  l)y  Prf)fess()r 
Rufus  C,  Obrecht  of  the  University  of 
Illinois:  "  Quality  in  a  horse  is  of  prime 


importance.  This  term  when  applied  to 
horses  has  reference  to  their  bones,  skin, 
hair  and  muscles.  Its  presence  is  shown 
by  clean-cut  features  of  the  head;  firm, 
clean  bone;  tendons  well  defined;  close  fit- 
ting, glove-like  skin;  hair  fine  and  silk>-, 
an  abundance  of  finish  and  absence  of 
coarseness,  but  not  necessarily  small  bone. 
When  slightly  exerted  the  skin  will  show- 
clearly  an  intricate  network  of  veins. 
Coarse  hair  is  usually  associated  with  a 
coarse  skin  and  a  soft,  spongy  bone  which 
is  weak  and  subject  to  disease.  With  qual- 
ity the  muscles  stand  out  prominently  and 
are  clearly  defined,  which  aids  in  giving  a 
horse  finish.  Quality  is  a  strong  indica- 
tion of  the  extent  of  a  horse's  endurance. 
These  two  characteristics  are  closely  asso- 
ciated, and  a  horse  lacking  in  quality  is 
comparatively  a  cheap  animal." 

This  Association  has  always  maintained 
that  it  is  highly  important,  from  the 
humane  point  of  view,  to  encourage  the 
use  of  horses  of  good  quality,  and  the 
long  experience  that  w^e  have  had  in  the 
inspection  of  stables  has  confirmed  this 
opinion.  In  many  large  stables,  where 
horses  have  been  bought  without  much 
judgment,  all  the  horses  may  be  divided 
into  two  distinct  types :  first,  the  well-bred, 
smooth-hipped,  fine-coated  type,  and, 
second, the  low-bred,  ragged-hipped,  coarse- 
haired  type.  The  horses  of  the  first  class 
will  look  fat  and  sleek,  whereas 
the  horses  of  the  second  type  will  look  thin 
and  jaded,  although  all  the  horses  do  the 
same  amount  of  work.  The  Old  Horse 
Class  is  another  illustration.  The  veteran 
steeds  shown  in  that  class  are  almost  in- 
variably horses  of  quality.  They  repre- 
sent the  survival  of  the  fittest ;  and  the 
fittest  are  the  well-bred  ones. 


118 


BULLETINS 

Copies  of  all   Bulletins  may  be  had  on  application 

NO.  1— WATERING    AND  BEDDING 

ISSUED  IN  1909 


During  the  p^ist  fi\e  months  an  agent  of 
ihis  Association  has  visited  157  stables, 
inchiding  ahnost  all  the  large  livery  and 
Itoarding  stables  in  Boston  and  the  neigh- 
boring cities  and  towns.  One  object  of 
these  inspections  was  to  ascertain  the  prac- 
tice in  regard  to  watering  the  horses  during 
the  night,  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay, 
and  in  regard  to  bedding  them  in  the  day 
time,  as  well  as  at  night,  especially  on 
Sundays.  The  agent  submits  the  follow- 
ing report: — 

THE    WATERING    OF    HORSES     AT 
NIGHT 

In  most  cases  all  the  ha>-  which  horses 
in  the  city  receive  is  fed  to  them  at  night. 
It  is  therefore  especially  important  that 
they  should  be  watered  during  the  night. 
In  an  inspection  of  over  150  of  the  leading 
livery  and  boarding  stables  in  Boston  and 
the  vicinity,  particular  attention  was  paid 
to  this  matter.  All  authorities  agree,  and 
experience  teaches,  that  city-  horses  should 
be  watered  between  8  P.  M.  (9  P.  M.  would 
be  better)  and  midnight;  but  it  was  found 
that  less  than  half  of  the  stables  visited  give 
their  horses  water  after  7  P.  M. 

And  yet  more  stablemen  volunteered  in- 
formation on  this  subject  than  upon  an>' 
other  matter  considered  in  the  fi\e  months 
during  which  the  investigations  were  made. 
"A  horse  comes  in  hungry,"  w^as  the  usual 
way  of  putting  it,  "  and  he  wants  his  sup- 
per so  much  that  he  will  drink  but  little; 
and  he  ought  not  to  drink  deeply  at  that 
time,  even  if  he  wants  to.  Then  he  eats 
a  quantity  of  dry,  heating  food.  He 
shouldn't  have  water  right  after  eating; 
but  if  he  doesn't  get  a  good  drink  two  or 
three  hours  later,  he  will  go  through  the 
night    thirsty,    and    the    heating  food  will 


burn  out  his  insides  for  the  lack  of  the 
water  that  is  needed  to  give  the  nourish- 
ment of  the  food  a  chance  to  do  the  good  it 
ought  to  be  doing."  Moreover,  a  horse  not 
watered  at  night  is  very  apt  to  drink  too 
much  in  the  morning. 

This  night-watering  is  not  only  common 
humanity  in  hot  weather,  but  it  is  almost 
ecjually  valuable  in  winter.  For  appetite 
comes  with  the  bracing  efifect  of  cold 
weather,  and  horses  eat  more  than  they  do 
in  summer.  Consequently,  if  this  extra 
food  is  to  do  its  part  in  giving  the  horse 
power  to  resist  the  cold  and  the  strain  of 
winter  work,  water  must  be  given  at  the 
time  when  it  will  do  the  most  good,  which 
is,  in  most  cases,  between  8  and  10  P.  M., 
or  even  later.  Nothing  does  so  much 
toward  giving  back  a  return  for  the  food 
given  in  the  way  of  extra  strength,  working 
endurance  and  good  condition. 

The  effect  of  this  night-watering  on  the 
blood  and  general  circulation  is  far-reach- 
ing. The  thirst  that  follows  the  digestion 
of  a  meal  is  the  call  of  nature  for  the  water 
that  is  needed  to  help  the  good  of  the  food 
to  get  into  the  flesh  and  blood  of  the  ani- 
mal; and  equally  important  is  the  part 
played  by  the  water  in  sending  the  waste 
matter  out  of  the  body  with  the  least  pos- 
sible wear  and  tear  on  the  organs  that  per- 
form this  indispensable  duty.  A  horse  that 
remains  thirsty  all  night  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  last  so  long  as  one  that  is  watered 
at  the  proper  time.* 


*If  anyone  doubts  whether  horses  need  watering 
at  night,  let  him  go  into  a  stable,  say  at  9  P.  M., 
turn  loose  the  horses  which  have  not  been  watered 
since  they  were  fed,  and  observe  how  eagerh-  they 
will  make  for  the  watering  trough. — H.  C.  M. 


119 


BEDDING  AND  REST 

There  were  twenty-five  horses  in  a  stable 
not  far  from  Boston  that  was  visited  one 
Sunday  morning.  The  horses  were  a  fair, 
average  lot  of  the  kind  used  in  delivery 
wagons  and  in  general  business.  Most  of 
them  were  in  reasonably  good  working 
order,  and  the  stable  had  the  appearance 
of  being  well-kept. 

Of  the  twenty-five  horses  in  the  stable 
twenty-four  were  standing  up,  and  just  one 
was  lying  down.  In  twenty-four  stalls 
there  was  no  bedding;  in  one  there  was  a 
good  supply.  One  doesn't  have  to  be  a 
wizard  to  guess  that  the  horse  that  was 
getting  a  needed  rest  was  in  the  same  stall 
with  the  bedding.  All  the  other  horses 
were  being  deprived  of  what  might  be  the 
best  part  of  their  Sunday,  namely,  the  op- 
portunity of  taking  their  weight  off  legs 
and  feet  that  usually  have  all,  and  more, 
than  they  can  do  to  stand  the  strain  of  the 
week-day  wear  and  tear. 

In  another  stable  there  is  a  horse  that 
works  in  a  single  grocery  wagon.  He  is 
between  the  shafts  three  days,  but  every 
fourth  day  remains  in  the  stable.  Each 
morning  brings  him  exactly  the  same 
breakfast,  and  there  is  absolutely  nothing 
in  the  care  given  that  tells  him  whether  he 
is  to  go  out  or  stay  in.  But  he  knows  how 
to  keep  his  own  calendar,  and  every  fourth 
morning,  just  as  soon  as  he  has  finished 
eating,  he  lies  doMn  in  comfort  on  the  plen- 
tiful supply  of  bedding  which  is  kept  under 
every  horse  in  that  stable  at  all  times;  and 
he  frequently  stays  down  the  better  part 
of  the  day. 

In  still  another  stalile  there  arc  pairs  of 
horses  that  are  used  half  a  day  and  rested 
the  other  half.  Encouraged  by  plenty  of 
bedding,  they  have  formed  habits  of  resting 
their  legs  and  feet  at  every  possible  oppor- 
tunity. 


There  is  an  old  saying  that  a  good  city 
horse  could  use  up  four  sets  of  legs  and 
feet.  This  means  that  a  large  part  of  his 
bodily  strength  and  endurance  is  wasted 
because  lameness  and  suffering  wear  out 
the  unfortunate  animal  long  before  his 
time.  "  His  shoulders  is  all  gone  savin'  his 
legs,"  was  the  way  one  stableman  described 
the  condition  of  a  horse  that  had  worked 
his  body  muscles  to  pieces  in  trying  to  ease 
the  strain  of  his  battered  legs  and  feet. 

As  in  the  case  of  watering  at  night,  the 
extra  expense  of  giving  a  day-time  bed  to 
a  horse  is  slight,  compared  with  the  great 
benefit  gained  from  the  rest  and  chance  for 
repairs  given  the  legs.  The  good  that 
comes  out  of  this  is  reflected  in  the  condi- 
tion of  the  whole  body;  and  all  who  own 
horses  should  see  that  this  chance  for 
needed  rest  is  given  their  horses  whenever 
they  are  in  the  stable.  A  horse  will  not  lie 
down  on  the  stable  planks  unless  worn  and 
weary  beyond  the  point  where  it  is  right  to 
use  any  animal. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Agent. 

The  Directors  of  this  Association  earn- 
estly submit  the  foregoing  facts  and  obser- 
vations to  owners  of  work-horses  and  tc 
keepers  of  boarding  and  livery  stables, 
partly  as  a  matter  of  economy,  but  still 
more  as  a  matter  of  humanity. 


Postscript.  During  the  past  winter  four  or  five 
owners  of  work-horses,  with  large  stables,  have,  at 
our  suggestion,  given  their  horses  a  good  bed  through 
the  day  on  Sundays;  and  in  each  case  they  report 
that  the  horses  take  advantage  of  it,  and  are  the 
better  for  it. 

The  horses  owned  b>-  William  Bradley,  the  famous 
New  York  contractor,  are  remarkable  for  lasting 
long,  and  in  Mr.  Bradley's  stables  the  horses  are 
always  watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay,  and 
they  are  at  all  times  particularly  well  bedded. 


120 


BULLETIN   No.  4 

VACATIONS  FOR  WORK-HORSES 

{Especially    from    the   Economic   Point   of   View 
By  GILBERT   TOMPKINS   and    HENRY  C.  MERWIN 


Everyone  will  admit  that  to  give  a 
work-horse  an  annual  vacation  is  an  act 
of  humanity,  and,  we  believe,  it  can  be 
shown  that  it  is  an  act  of  economy  also. 
Se\'eral  years  ago  one  of  the  writers  of  this 
Bulletin  w^as  asked  the  following  question 
by  the  owner  of  an  old  horse,  not  a  work- 
horse in  this  case,  but  a  carriage  horse  — 
"  What  shall  I  do  wdth  him?  He  is  getting 
old  and  stifT  and  too  slow  to  use.  Shall 
I  kill  him, — or  what?"  The  answer  was : — 
"  Try  giving  him  a  summer's  rest,  or  per- 
haps even  a  vacation  of  six  months.  Take 
his  shoes  ofi,  let  him  haxe  plenty  of  grass 
or  bran,  and  reduce  his  grain  about  one- 
half."  Six  months  later  the  writer  met 
the  owner  of  this  horse,  who  exclaimed: 
"  I  am  much  obliged  to  you  for  giving  me 
a  new  horse!"  Being  asked  what  he  meant, 
he  replied  that  the  vacation  given  to  his 
old  horse  had  so  rejuvenated  him  that  he 
was  almost  as  good  as  ever,  and  was  doing 
his  work  as  a  carriage  horse  with  satis- 
faction to  his  owner  and  himself.  Similar 
cases  will  be  found  stated  in  the  appendix. 

Another  experience  was  the  follow^ing: 
A  humane  person  bought  an  old  cab  horse 
in  the  city, — a  very  old  horse,  much  over 
twenty.  This  horse  was  so  stiff  and  re- 
duced in  strength  that  it  was  wdth  some 
dif^culty  that  he  was  driven  out  to  the 
country.  Six  months  later  he  had  lim- 
bered up  completely,  and  was  supple  and 
active  enough  to  run  away  with  the 
farmer  who  had  charge  of  him.  There 
are  thousands  of  work-horses  hard  at  work 
in  cities  to-day  who  have  begun  to  run 
down  hill,  and  will  be  worthless  or  nearly 
so  within  a  year  or  two;  and  yet  if  these 
horses  could  be  given  a  rest  and  a  chance 
to  recuperate,  the>"  would  in  six  months' 
time  be  worth  ahnost  as  much  as  the  price 
originally  paid  for  them. 

Horses  are  scarce  and  high,  with  no 
prospect   of   lower    prices   or   of   a   better 


supply,  and  if  a  profit  is  to  be  made  from 
the  use  of  them,  the  loss  occasioned  by 
wear  and  tear  must  be  kept  down.  Any 
business  that  considers  merely  its  annual 
income  without  regard  to  the  depreciation 
account  will  soon  be  in  a  bad  state.  It 
is  well  known  that  an  average  horse  will 
last  twice  as  long  with  one  kind  of  a  driver 
as  he  will  with  a  worse  kind,  and  with  an 
annual  vacation  instead  of  constant,  un- 
remitting labor,  his  health  and  usefulness 
will  be  correspondingly  increased.  Work 
and  action  must  be  followed  by  rest  and 
relaxation.  Even  iron  and  steel  have  their 
limits,  and  machinery  itself  cannot  be 
overtaxed  without  a  loss  of  efficiency. 

Flesh  and  blood,  mind  and  nerve,  energy 
and  courage,  all  these  must  depend  on 
rest  periods  in  which  nature  may  bring 
them  back  to  their  normal  strength. 
This  is  more  widely  recognized  every  year 
in  its  application  to  human  beings,  and 
it  is  time  that  those  who  own  or  use  horses 
should  realize  that  the  same  principle  is 
equally  applicable  to  horse-flesh. 


THE 


EFFECT  OF   CITY  WORK  ON 
HORSES 


Work-horses  in  the  city,  if  worked  too 
hard  or  too  fast,  or  if  not  properly  cared 
for,  or  if  weakened  by  age,  deteriorate  in 
the   following  different  ways: 

(1)  They  become  thin. 

(2)  Their  feet  become  sore  or  diseased. 

(3)  They  become  grain-burnt  or  other- 
wise weakened  in  digestion. 

(4)  Their  muscles  become  tired  and 
strained. 

Let  us  take  these  up  in  their  order. 

(1)  The  first  symptom  of  age  in  a 
horse  is  apt  to  be  a  falling-off  in  flesh. 
Others  become  thin  from  having  a  bad 
dri\er,  or  from  being  over-hurried  in  their 
work,  or  from  poor  feeding.     A  short  rest 


121 


will  often  do  wonders  for  a  horse  in   ihis 
condition. 

(2)  The  Fkkt. — Un(iuestional)l\-  the 
best  way  to  make  a  horse's  feet  last  in  the 
city  is  to  slioe  him  with  rui)ber  or  leather 
pads  and  plenty  of  tar  and  oakum  under- 
neath. This  keeps  the  feet  soft,  and 
deadens  the  concussion.  But,  with  the 
best  of  shoeing,  horse's  feet  will  give  out 
on  the  pa\-ements;  and  nothing  will  ten<l 
to  preserve  their  feet  more  than  an  occa- 
sional let-up  during  which  their  shoes  can 
be  remo\ed,  their  feet  can  get  back  to  the 
ground,  their  heels  can  expand,  and  fever 
in  the  feet  may  be  reduced  by  the  moisture 
of  dew  and  wet  grass,  swampy  land,  etc. 

(3)  The  Grain -Burnt  Horse. —  It 
must  be  remembered  that  a  horse  at  work 
in  the  city  is  not  in  a  normal  condition. 
The  constant  feeding  on  dry  food,  and  es- 
pecially on  such  stimulating  food  as  oats 
and  corn,  produces  an  unnatural  condi- 
tion of  the  blood.  All  city  horse-owners 
know  and  dread  the  disease  of  the  kidneys 
called  "  black-water."  This  is  especially 
a  Monday  mor;ning  disease,  and  when  a 
Sunday  and  a  holiday  come  together,  so 
that  the  work-horse  has  two  days  of  con- 
tinuous rest,  many  cases  of  black-water 
always  occur.  One  year  in  Chicago  there 
were  150  deaths  from  this  disease  in  one 
day.  Even  if  a  horse  does  not  suffer  from 
acute  disease  of  this  kind,  his  whole  system 
becomes  feverish  and  abnormal  from  years 
of  high  graining  without  any  chance  to  get 
back  to  nature,  such  as  a  horse  gets  by 
being  turned  out  to  grass.  Everybody 
who  has  seen  a  horse  turned  loose  in  a  lot 
after  being  confined  in  a  stable  must  have 
observed  how  he  first  paws  up  a  little  turf 
with  his  forefoot,  and  thus  gets  at  the  earth 
underneath.  He  is  more  anxious  to  eat 
this  earth  than  to  eat  the  grass,  and  it  is 
certain  that  the  earth  is  wholesome  for  the 
horse.  It  has  a  cleansing  efTect  and  is  a 
cure  for  worms.  Nothing,  in  short,  is  so 
good  for  the  digestion  of  a  horse,  especially 
after  long  years  of  confinement  in  a  stable 
and  high  feeding,  than  an  opportunity  to 
eat  grass  and  earth. 

(4)  TiRicD  Muscles.— Not  everybody 
realizes  that  a  horse,  to  the  eye,  may  be 
in  perfect  condition,  and  yet  his  muscles 
may  be  so  tired  and  strained  that  move- 
ment is  positively  painful  to  him,  and  any 
movement  but  a  slow  one  almost  impos- 


sible. Work-horses  and  hack-horses  in 
this  condition  are  often  seen  in  the  street, 
especially  when  they  begin  to  grow  old. 
These  horses  look  fairly  fat  and  sleek,  but 
the>'  are  tired,  their  heads  droop,  they  ha\e 
no  life  and  they  lack  energy  and  Cjuickness 
of  movement.  Nc^thing  but  a  rest  will 
restore  these  horses;  but  a  rest  of  a  few 
months  will  do  it,  and  it  will  increase  their 
N'alue  at  least  one-half.  The  wTiter  of 
this  Bulletin  remembers  seeing  a  horse  used 
by  a  rural  free  delivery  mail-carrier  that, 
being  naturally  a  good  feeder,  and  having 
all  the  grain  that  he  would  eat,  was  in  fine 
bodily  condition;  but  he  did  double  the 
work  of  an  ordinary  horse,  that  is,  he 
travelled  twenty-three  miles  a  day  for  six 
days  in  the  week,  and  he  was  so  tired  and 
stiff  that  it  was  difficult  to  urge  him  from 
a  walk  into  a  trot.  It  is  from  this  stiffen- 
ing of  the  muscles  that  a  horse  really  grows 
old,  and  if  the  muscles  are  restored  by  an 
annual  vacation  the  useful  life  of  the  horse 
will  be  extended  to  an  astonishing  degree. 

A  VACATION  AT  HOME 

Many  stables,  especially  truck-horse 
stables,  are  so  situated  that  a  horse  can  be 
given  a  very  good  vacation  without  send- 
ing him  away.  That  is,  there  is  a  yard 
connected  with  the  stable  where  the  horse 
can  be  turned  loose  in  fine  w-eather,  with 
his  shoes  off.  His  feed  should,  of  course, 
be  changed  to  meet  the  changed  condition 
of  his  life.  His  oats  should  be  reduced  at 
least  one-half,  but  always  according  to  the 
age  of  the  horse,  and  plenty  of  bran  should 
be  given  to  him,  with  carrots,  turnips  and 
other  vegetables,  and,  if  possible,  some 
grass,  now  and  then,  sent  in  from  neigh- 
boring farms.  In  this  way  the  horse  can 
derive  pretty  nearly  all  the  benefits  of  a 
vacation  in  the  country  without  the  ex- 
pense of  sending  him  aw'ay,  and  w^ithout 
separating  him  from  his  well-known  and 
beloved  companions. 

A  VACATION  IN  THE  COUNTRY 

It  is  hardly  necessary  to  say  that  the 
greatest  care  should  be  taken  in  selecting 
the  farm  where  the  horse  is  to  be  turned 
out  for  a  rest.  Few  farmers  know  how  to 
care  for  a  horse,  or  will  take  any  trouble 
to    make   him   comfortable.     It   must   be 


122 


remembered,  of  course,  that  the  city  horse, 
being  used  to  high  feed,  camiot  have  all 
his  grain  taken  away  from  him,  especially 
if  he  be  an  old  horse,  without  falling  into 
a  worse  condition  than  his  former  one. 
Unless  he  is  a  young  horse  in  rich  pasturage, 
he  must  recei\'e  some  grain  every  day,  and 
the  old  horse  will  need  a  good  deal,  per- 
haps one-half  of  his  usual  r^ition. 

Another  thing  to  be  looked  out  for  is  the 
annoyance  from  flies  and  mosciuitoes. 
This  is  so  great,  except  in  farms  situated 
on  high  ground,  that  a  horse,  especially  a 
city  horse,  cannot  be  turned  out  all  day  or 
even  all  night  in  a  pasture  or  field  without 
losing  more  than  he  would  gain.  In  pas- 
tures of  northern  New  England,  where  the 
land  lies  high  and  the  nights  are  cool, 
horses  can  be  turned  out  day  and  night; 
but  within  thirty  or  fifty  miles  of  Boston, 
in  midsummer,  there  is  hardly  more  than 
an  hour  or  so,  in  the  w^hole  tw^enty-four 
hours,  when  a  horse  can  be  turned  out 
without  being  driven  almost  crazy  by  flies 
in  the  daytime,  and  mosquitoes  at  night. 


VACATION  BY  PIECEMEAL 

One  way  of  giving  a  horse  a  vacation 
is  to  increase  the  number  of  horses  at 
work,  for  any  firm  or  concern,  so  as  to 
permit  each  horse  to  lay  off  one  day  out 
of  the  six  working  days,  or  to  work  half 
a  day  only  for  one  or  more  w^orking  days 
in  the  week.  For  example,  suppose  a 
given  concern  has  work  enough  to  keep 
four  three-hundred-dollar  horses  busy.  Let 
them  add  one  horse  to  the  equipment,  so 
that  there  will  be  five  horses  for  the  work. 
This  would  relieve  toil-worn  legs  and  feet 
and  over-strained  bodies  and  digestion, 
would  lessen  somewhat  the  amount  of 
grain  required^for  each  horse,  and  would 
greatly  reduce  the  annual  depreciation 
in  the  \alue  of  each  horse.  In  this  way, 
it  is  speaking  within  bounds  to  say,  that 
the  working  life  of  all  the  horses  would 
be  prolonged  from  an  average  of  six  years 
to  an  a\erage  of  ten  years. 

It  should  be  remembered  also  that  a 
horse  in  good  condition  and  spirits  is  far 
more  efticient,  and  will  get  over  far  more 
ground  in  a  day,  than  one  that  is  jaded 
or  stiff  from  overwork;  and   besides,   the 


good,  active  horse  tends  to  make  the 
driver  a  better  and  more  efficient  employee. 
Another  consideration  is  the  advertising 
value  of  a  good  horse  in  good  condition  and 
spirits.  This  increases  every  year,  and  in 
cities  where  work-horse  parades  are  held 
it  increases  very  fast.  Customers  look 
more  and  more  at  the  horse  used,  directly 
or  indirectly,  in  supplying  their  w^ants, 
and  a  fine  horse  gives  an  appearance  of 
success  and  up-to-dateness  that  is  worth 
much  more  than  it  costs. 

VACATIONS  FOR  POOR 
MEN'S  HORSES 

A  PROBLEM 

(Extract    from    a    letter    from    the    Ohio 
Humane  Society.) 

"  A  difficult  problem  in  this  vacation 
work  is  that  of  the  poor  owner  of  a  horse 
who  earns  a  living  for  a  family  by  running 
an  express  wagon  or  peddling.  As  a  rule, 
he  is  too  poor  to  grant  the  horse  a  vaca- 
tion; but  we  hope  to  provide  for  him 
later." 

The  same  problem  confronts  everyone 
who  tries  to  help  in  this  direction.  The 
only  way  to  meet  the  situation  seems  to 
be  to  provide  some  good  "  second-hand 
horses  that  may  be  lent — under  reasonable 
and  proper  restrictions — as  substitutes  for 
the  horses  that  need  rest. 

Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses, 
at  Stow,  twenty-five  miles  from  Boston, 
has  numerous  reconstructed  horses  that 
it  lends  to  people  in  that  neighborhood, 
where  they  can  frequently  be  inspected 
by  the  agents  of  the  Farm.  The  Farm  has 
no  horses  for  lending  to  city  owners;  but 
it  is  ahvays  ready  to  give  free  rest  and 
treatment  to  the  horses  of  poor  men. 

A  horse  may  be  sent  by  anybody  at 
any  time  to  Red  Acre  Farm,  with  or 
without  notice,  and  he  will  be  cared  for. 
This  Association  acts  as  the  Boston  Agent 
of  the  Farm. 

Pine  Ridge,  at  Dedham,  the  annex  of 
the  Animal  Rescue  League  (51  Carver 
Street,  Boston),  will  also  take  poor  men's 
horses,  free  of  charge,  for  a  vacation  and 
for  treatment.  Pine  Ridge  is  only  ten 
miles  from  the  city,  and  is  therefore  con- 
venienth'  situated  for  this  purpose. 


123 


APPENDIX 


TESTIMONY  AS  TO  VACATIONS 
FOR  WORK-HORSES 

A  large  bakery  concern  in  Boston,  the 
George  G.  Fox  Co.,  says: — 

"  Our  system  is  to  give  each  of  our 
liorses  tw^o  weeks  at  pasture  e\ery  year, 
sending  them  four  at  a  time  while  the 
seasfni  lasts.  We  are  well  pleased  with 
the  results." 

EXPERIENCE  OF  A  LEADING   TRUCKMAN 

(Letter  to  the  President  of  the  l^oston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association.) 

Boston,  May  l.'i,  191 L 
Dear  Sir: — 

I  write  this  letter  to  call  your  attention  to  a 
gray  mare,  stone  blind,  which  we  worked  in  our 
Inisiness  for  fourteen  years.  When  she  had  been 
worked  for  about  twelve  years,  she  seemed  to  have 
a  general  breakdown,  and  about  that  time  you  and 
I  had  a  conversation  in  regard  to  "  reconstructed 
horses,"  and  you  advised  me  to  give  this  mare 
two  months'  lay-ofT  and  see  what  effect  it  would 
have.  I  followed  your  instructions — we  have  a 
large  yard — and  this  mare  was  turned  out  every 
day,  and  most  of  the  time  we  hired  a  boy  to  take 
her  out  and  give  her  some  grass.  In  two  months' 
time  she  came  back  perfectly  well  and  seemingly 
as  good  as  ever.  We  worked  her  for  about  two 
years  from  that  time,  and  then  we  pensioned  her 
and  sent  her  to  a  farm. 

We  have  done  the  same  thing  with  three  others, 
and  one  of  these  was  run  down  so  badly  that  our 
veterinary  surgeon  advised  me  to  have  him  killed. 
He  declared  that  one  of  this  horse's  lungs  was  nearly 
gone,  and  thought  he  was  not  worth  one  dollar. 
W'e  had  used  this  horse  for  about  eight  years,  and 
concluded  that  we  would  try  giving  him  a  rest. 
After  three  months'  rest  he  was  one  of  the  hand- 
somest horses  in  Boston,  and  he  remained  so  for 
about  two  years,  and  last  year  was  shown  with  the 
"  reconstructed  horses  "  in  the  W^ork-Horse  Parade. 
This  year  he  died  of  blackwater  on  account  of  his 
being  so  fieshy. 

Our  experience  simply  shows  that  your  idea  of 
a  vacation  for  horses  that  are  run  down  is  correct, 
and  I  hope  that  many  other  horse  owners  will  make 
the  same  experiment.  The  results  I  have  no 
question  in  regard  to. 

Very  truly  yours, 

W^M.  D.  gUIMBV. 


THE  EXPERIENCE  OF  AN  EXPRESSMAN 

"  This  horse  went  to  pieces  after  eight  years  o' 
city  delivery  work,  and  wasn't  worth  anything; 
When  he  came  to  us,  his  legs  were  swollen,  kidne\> 
weak,  one  lung  going,  and  the  other  almost  gone. 
He  couldn't  even  go  down  an  easy  incline  without 
stopping  and  struggling  for  breath.  He  was  given 
some  physic,  and  then  laid  off  for  the  summer.  We 
hired  boys  to  lead  him  (and  other  horses)  in  tht 
grass  of  some  open  lots  while  the  dew  was  on  it,  and 
let  them  graze  afternoons.  We  gave  this  horse 
the  freedom  of  the  barn  and  the  yard,  and  after  a 
while  he  began  stealing  the  other  horses'  feed  on 
his  own  account.  He  finally  filled  out  and  improved 
so  much  that  I  took  him  for  my  own  use.  Now  he 
feels  so  well  that  he  won't  even  walk  up  hill.  He's 
also  a  little  on  the  alarm-clock  pattern;  when  he 
stands  in  front  of  the  office  evenings,  you  have  to 
tie  him  a  little  before  six  o'clock,  or  he  will  go  home 
to  supper  and  the  stable  of  his  own  notion." 


Other  horses  that  have  been  re-built  by 
this  same  owner  have  been  sold  well,  arc 
in  satisfactory  condition  and  are  doing 
good  work.  His  example  is  well  worth 
following. 


RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

In  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  there 
is  a  class  for  Reconstructed  Horses.  The 
medal-winner  in  this  class  two  years  ago 
was  a  chestnut  mare  bought  for  $75,  in 
the  fall,  from  a  provision  dealer  whose 
horses  are  knocked  about  by  boy  drivers. 
This  mare  was  restored  to  health  by  a 
rest,  and  sold  for  $300  in  the  spring.  One 
year  ago  the  medal  was  won  by  a  horse 
only  eight  years  old,  sound  except  for 
blindness,  that  had  been  bought  in  the 
preceding  fall  for  $15,  as  he  lay  in  the 
gutter  too  weak  to  get  up.  He  then 
weighed  1040  pounds;  four  months  after- 
ward he  was  a  strong,  powerful  animal 
weighing    1360    pounds. 


124 


1 


THE    HORSE 


By  Hugo  Krause 


If  one  animal,  n^ore  than  an\-  other,  has 
a-ntributcd  to  the  welfare  and  happiness 
of  mankind,  it  has  been  the  horse.  Forced 
into  captivity,  domesticated,  and  inter- 
bred until  he  reveals  the  highest  tiualitics 
of  brute  intelligence  and  beauty  of  form, 
he  has  been  man's  patient  and  faithful 
burden-bearer  as  well  as  his  silent  com- 
panion of  the  centuries.  In  literature,  in 
art,  in  song;  in  war,  as  well  as  in  peace,  he 
has  stood  by  his  master's  side. 

The  history  of  the  horse  is  in  a  large 
measure  the  history  of  the  human  race. 
He  stands  today    as   the  highest  embodi- 


ment of  physical  perfection,  the  most  deli- 
cately constructed  dynamo,  the  most 
beautiful  animal  creation  that  the  inge- 
nuity of  man  has  l)een  able  to  evolve  by 
artificial  means.  As  we  look  upon  this 
noble  friend  of  man  who  is  so  often  sub- 
jected to  the  neglect  and  cruelty  of  com- 
mercial greed  and  abject  slavery,  let  us 
not  forget  that  though  he  may  be  owned 
individually,  he  is  ours  by  race  inheritance, 
ours  to  use,  ours  to  enjoy,  ours  to  protect, 
and  that  we  owe  it  to  him  as  well  as  to 
ourselves  to  demand  for  him  justice  and 
fair  play. 


THE    DRIVER 


By  Henry  C.  Merwin 


The  highly  de\eloped  ner\'ous  system  of 
the  horse  renders  him  peculiarly  capable  of 
suffering.  Rough  usage,  even  if  it  stops 
far  short  of  absolute  brutality,  keeps  him 
in  a  constant  state  of  fear  or  irritation. 
Anyone  who  is  accustomed  to  obser\e 
horses  can  tell  b>-  a  single  glance  at  a  given 
horse  whether  the  driver  is  a  good,  bad,  or 
indifferent  one.  The  expression  of  the 
animal's  eye  and  the  carriage  of  his  ears 
tell  the  story  unmistakably. 

There  are  many  teamsters  who  treat  the 
horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and  there- 
fore are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty  toward 


him,  which  reacts  on  their  own  characters. 
Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their 
lives,  and  their  daily  labor  becomes  to  them 
a  degradation  and  a  curse. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many 
humane  dri\'ers,  who  have  a  real  affection 
for  their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride 
in  their  appearance.  These  men  make 
good  husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens; 
and  their  daily  labor  is  not  only  a  means  of 
livelihood,  but  an  unfailing  source  of  happi- 
ness. To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is 
the  main  object  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association. 


125 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


American  Coal  Co 70 

Atlantic    Works 72 

At  wood  &  McManus 62 

Babcock,  E.  J 60 

Babcock,  F.  M 56 

liadger,  E.  B.  &  Sons  Co 68 

liain  Bros.  Co 82 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Limited 68 

liartlett,  A.  J 76 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co 82 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co 64 

Bellevue  Hotel 54 

Benson   Bros 84 

Bicchieri,  Ant.  &  Co 60 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co 62 

Boston  Badge  Co 26 

Boston  Forge  Co 66 

Boston  Industrial  Home,  Inc 56 

Bowen,  C 58 

Boyd-Brockton  Transportation  Co 56 

Breck,  Jos.  &  Sons,  Corp 48 

Brigham,  C.  &  Co 40 

Bruno,  Filippo  &  Co 66 

Buck,  C.  H.  &  Co 70 

Burns,  J 70 

Campbell,   Thomas 82 

("base,  L.  C.  &  Co 74 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co 86 

Christie,  W.  M.&Son 86 

City  Laundry  Co 22 

Clement,  W.  A 74 

Coiley,  J.  T 70 

Coleman  Bros 38 

Commonwealth  Hospital 66 

Crescent  Star  Beverage  Co 84 

Dailey,  Charles  &  Co 48 

Daniels,  Dr.  A.  C,  Inc 32 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 60 

Di  Napoli,  Pasquali 78 

Doherty&Daly 78 

Donovan,  P.  J 101 

Dorchester  Ice  Co 64 

Dover  Stamping  &  Manufacturing  Co 64 

Driscoll,  J.  C 54 


East  Boston  Gas  Co .58 

Eastern  Storage  Co 74 

Eddy,  C.  F.  Co 30 

Eldridge-Baker  Co 72 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co 80 


Fells  Ice  Co 

Ferguson  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.^ 

Forgie's,  James,  Sons 

Fox  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 

Freedman,  I.  &  Co 


Gahm,  Joseph  &  Son 50 

Gnecco,  Frank 82 

Gove,  Austin  &  Son,  Inc SO 

Greene  Bros.  &  Co 42 

Hanson,  John  H 86 

Higgins,  W'.  J 80 

Hill  &  Hill 52 

Hovey,  C.  F.  &  Co 36 

Hovey,  H.  A.  &  Co 50 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co 66 

Hoyt  Co.,  The 84 

Hunt-Spiller  Manufacturing  Co 3S 


Johnson,  C.  S 

Jordan  Marsh  Co. 


Kelly  Peanut  Co.,  The 76 

Kennett,  R.  A 44 

Krauss,  William 86 


Little,  Brown  &  Co 

Locke  Coal  Co 

London  Harness  Co.,  The 

Lowney,  The  Walter  M.,  Co. 
Lynch,  James  F 


,101 
.50 
..50 
.30 

..86 


Magee  Express  Co 70 

Maiden  Coal  Co 52 

Maiden  Electric  Co.  and  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas 

Light  Co 30 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co 2<S 

Meyer  Jonasson  Co 48 

Moore,  F.  L.  &  Co 70 

Morss  &  W^hyte  Co.,  The 72 

Moxie  Co.,  The 40 

McCarthy,  F.  G.  &  Co 82 

McKinney  Bros.  &  Co 46 


126 


LIST   OF   ADVERTISERS   (Continued) 


National  Casket  Co 

Newcoml),  J.  S.  &  Co 

N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

O'Brion,  Fulton 


Pierre,  S.  S.  Co 20 

I'laiit,  Thomas  G.  Co 24 

Pureoxia  Co.,  The 38 

Reunion,  John  &  Sons  Co 70 

Red  Acre  Farm 46  and  101 

Rescue  Mission  Wood  &  Coal  Yard 56 

Revere  House 84 

Rhodes  Bros.  Co 52 

Rirhardson,  J.  H 66 

Roessle  Brewery,  The 52 

Ross,  C.  B 50 

R(nve,  A.  A.  &  Son  Co 76 

Sansone,  A 74 

Sicgcl,  Henry  Co 80 

Shapleigh  Coffee  Co 76 

Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc .58 

Smith,  C.  B.&Bro 86 

Smith,  I).  A.  Co 64 

Smith,  Ci.  \V.  (S:  F.  Iron  Co 76 


Standard  Charcoal  Co 84 

Star  Brewing  Co 84 

Stetson  Coal  Co.,  The 54 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co 74 

Sturtevant  &  Haley 54 

Suburban  Gas  &  Electric  Co 68 

Sullivan,  J.  H.  Co 76 


Talbot,  J.  C .82 

Tassinari,  V.  &  Co 70 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry,  Inc.  42 

Tighe,  J.  T.  Co 80 

Timberlake  &  Small.  76 

Tisdale,  Wilson  Co 72 

Toomey  &  Ormon 82 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Association 78 


Union  Ice  Co. 


Warren,  F.  C.  &  Bradford  Ci 

Waterhouse,  L.  A 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

Watts,  J.  H 

Wellington- Wild  Coal  Co. 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 

Whitney,  John  W 

Woodberry,  D.  S.  &  Co 


.74 

.66 
.52 
101 
80 
.78 
44 
.  .66 


127 


INDEX  TO  CLASSES 


Class 


1. 

Fire  Departments                                                Cla 

ss  25. 

Manufacturers 

2_ 

United  States  Letter  Carriers. 

26. 

Builders  and  Building  Material 

3. 

City  of  Boston  —Park  Department 

27. 

Metals  and  Junk 

4. 

" 

Public  Works  Dept. 

2S. 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers 

Old  Horses 

29. 

Hay  and  Grain 

o. 

"       " 

Public    Works    Dept. 

'     30. 

Lumber 

Paving  Division 

31. 

Ice 

n. 

Public   Works    Dept. 

'     32. 

Contractors 

Street    Cleaning 

•     33. 

Coke  and  Charcoal 

Service 

'     34. 

Coal 

7. 

Public   Works    Dept. 

'     3"). 

Owners'  and  Foremen's  Runabouts 

Street  Watering 

'     3(). 

Truckmen 

and    Oiling  Service 

•     37. 

Four-Horse     Teams     (Lawrence      Gold 

s. 
(1. 

Public  Works  Dept. 

Water  Department 
Public    Works    Dept 

Medalj 
CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

Sewer  Service 

'     38. 

Singles — Light  Horses 

10. 

Public   Works    Dept. 
Sanitary  Service 

'     39. 

Middle   Weight   or  Wagon 
Horses 

North  Grove  Street 

'     40. 

Doubles — Middle     Weight     or     Wagon 

11. 

" 

Public   Works    Dept. 

Horses 

Sanitary  Service 

'     41. 

Singles — Heavy  Horses 

Albany  Street 

'     42. 

Doubles 

12. 

Milk 

'     43. 

Old  Horses 

13. 

Bakers 

Division  A 

14. 

Laundry 

B 

lo. 

Deliveries— 

-Newspapers 

C 

If). 

" 

Miscellaneous 

"         D 

17. 

" 

Department  Stores 

E 

IS. 

F'urniture  Makers  and  Movers 

'     44. 

Champion  Old  Horses 

19. 

Provisions- 

-Light  Horses 

'     4.5. 

Reconstructed  Horses 

20. 

" 

Heavy  Horses 

'     46. 

Barrel  Racks 

21. 

Confectioners 

'     47. 

Express 

22. 

(irocers 

'     48. 

Hucksters 

23. 

Public  Ser\ 

ire  {\)ri)()nuinns 

'     49. 

Dealers'  Class,    Singles 

21. 

Oil  Dealers 

' 

'    r,o. 

Doubles 

128 


THE  WOODBERRY  PRESS 
27  Beach  St.,  Boston 


f 

■v^: 

3 


BOSTON 

WORK  HORSE  PARADE 

ASSOCIATION 


19  13 


I 


I 


CATALOGUE 


Boston  Work-Horse  Parade 
Association 


(INCORPORATED) 


ELEVENTH  ANNUAL  PARADE 


May  30th,  1913 


f 


DIRECTORS 


HENRY  C.  MERWIN,   President 

State  House,  Room  :i56 

ARTHUR   PERRIN,  Vice-President  FRANCIS   PEABODY,  Vice-President 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline  Devonshire  Building 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD,  Secretary 

Kil  Milk  Street 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3rd,  Treasurer 

City  Hall 

GEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON,  207  Bay  State  Road 
JOHN   H.  JEWETT,  161  High  Street 

W.  D.  QUIMBY,  79  Portland  Street 

DR.  F.  H.  ROWLE^Y,  Pres.  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  45  Milk  Street 
G.  F.  STEBBINS,  12   Pearl  Street 


AGENTS 


A.  G.  MERWIN,  General  Agent 
15  Beacon   Street 

JAMES  MEREDITH,  Inspector 
222  Everett  Street,  East  Boston 

T.  WATTS  DAVIES.  Inspector 
15  Beacon  Street 


OFFICE 

(OPEN  THROUGHOUT  THE  YEAR) 

15  BEACON  STREET,  ROOM  27 

TELEPHONE,  HAYMARKET  228 


BOSTON    WORK-HORSE 
PARADE   ASSOCIATION 


WHY  THIS  ASSOCIATION  EXISTS 

HE  horse  is  the  most  unfortunate  of  all  created  animals. 
Subject  to  painful  diseases  in  the  bones  of  the  leg  and 
foot,  he  is  often  forced  to  work  when  so  lame  that 
every  step  is  agonizing.  He  is  finely  organized,  and 
therefore  suffers  greatly  from  extreme  heat  or  cold, 
from  change  of  climate,  and  from  homesickness.  His 
teeth  frequently  become  uneven  or  diseased  so  that 
he  cannot  grind  his  food  properly,  and  he  falls  away, 
perhaps  nearly  starves  to  death,  before  this  condition  is  discovered. 
Moreover,  the  horse  is  an  excessively  timid,  sensitive  and  nervous  animal. 
Little  things  annoy  and  worry  him;  and  if  he  is  handled  by  a  rough  or 
brutal  driver  or  groom  he  lives  in  a  state  of  perpetual  misery  although 
he  ma\-  be  well  fed  and  not  overworked.  For  thousands  of  years  the 
horse  has  been  maltreated  by  mankind;  and  even  today  there  are  many 
owners  who  overwork  and  neglect  him,  and  many  teamsters  who  treat  the 
horse  as  if  he  were  a  machine,  and  therefore  are  guilty  of  continual  cruelty 
to  him.  Such  men  miss  the  opportunity  of  their  lives;  and  they  become 
worse  luen  e\ery  day  they  live. 

On  the  other  hand,  there  are  many  humane  owners  and  drivers  who 
have  a  real  affection  for  their  horses,  and  take  the  greatest  pride  in  their 
appearance.  These  men  make  good  husbands,  good  fathers,  good  citizens; 
and  their  daily  labor  is  not  only  a  means  of  livelihood,  but  an  unfailing 
source  of  happiness.  To  reward  and  increase  this  class  is  the  main  object 
of  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  Association. 


WHAT  THE  ASSOCIATION  DOES 

The  first  Work-Horse  Parade  in  America  was  held  by  this  Association 
on  May  30,  1903.  Since  then  we  have  held  an  annual  Parade,  and  ever> 
year  have  added  some  new  branch  to  our  work.      In  fact,  the  name  of  the 

3 


.\.ss(XMati()n  is  now  soincwhal  misleading  and  will  soon  be  changed.  We 
maintain  an  office  open  throughout  the  \ear,  and  besides  holding  the 
Parade  carry  on  the  following  activities: — 

1.  Assisting  other  Societies  to  hold  Work-Horse  Parades,  and  giving 
addresses,  illustrated  hy  stereopticon  pictures. 

2.  The  holding  of  Meetings  and  Smoke  Talks  for  Dri\ers  and  horse- 
men generally,  with  the  display  of  stereopticon  pictures. 

3.  The  Preparation    and    Distribution  of  Stable  Rules,  of  Drivers' 
Rules,  and  of  Hot-Weather  Rules. 

4.  The  Publication  and  Distribution  of  Bulletins  in  regard  to  the 
care  and  treatment  of  horses. 

5.  The  showering  of  horses   in   the  streets  of   Boston  during  days 
of  excessive  heat. 

6.  Agents,  unpaid,  to  assist  us  in  the  cities  and  towns  of  Massachu- 
setts, and  elsewhere  in  New  England. 

7.  The  maintenance  of  a  free  hospital  for  horses  in  the  city  of  Boston. 

8.  A  system  of  assisting  purchasers  to  buy  horses. 

9.  A  system  of  Stable  Inspection. 

These  activities  w^ill  be  found  described  separately,  but  briefl}'  below. 

ASSISTING  OTHER  SOCIETIES 

We  have  almost  daily  requests  from  all  j)arts  of  the  United  States, 
from  the  Provinces,  and  sometimes  from  more  distant  lands  for  informa- 
tion about  Work-Horse  Parades,  to  which  wq  are  always  glad  to  respond. 
We  have  a  collection  of  slides  for  the  stereopticon  display  of  pictures  of 
work-horses  and  other  horses,  and  we  are  happy  to  lend  them  to  any  person 
or  association  desiring  to  use  them.  There  was  an  excellent  Work-Horse 
Parade  in  Lynn  on  June  17,  1912,  held  by  the  L3'nn  Driving  Club,  and 
another  equalh'  good  at  Waltham,  held  on  April  19,  1913.  by  the  Waltham 
Animal  Aid  Society.  This  Association  furnished  the  judges  for  both  these 
Parades. 

MEETINGS  FOR  DRIVERS 

A  Smoke  Talk  for  drivers,  stablemen  and  all  other  persons  interested 
in  horses  was  given  on  Januar\-  24th,  at  Kingsley  Hall,  with  short  addresses 
by  Dr.  F.  H.  Rowley,  Mr.  W.  D.  Quimb\'  and  the  President  of  the  Asso- 
ciation, followed  by  a  display  of  stereopticon  pictures.  A  similar  enter- 
tainment, without  the  smoking,  and  with  the  addition  of  some  musical 
performances  w^as  given  at  the  same  place  on  February  21st  for  the  drivers, 
their  wives,  and  any  other  ladies  who  wished  to  attend.  The  pictures 
were  also  shown  at  Wellesley  College  on  April  24,  1913,  upon  the  invitation 
of  Miss  Mary  C^aswell. 


STABLE  POSTERS 

Last  summer  we  published  for  free  distribution  our  Hot-Weather  Rules, 
and,  in  resj)onse  to  applications  from  all  parts  of  the  country,  sent  out 
more  than  10,000  copies.  The\'  may  l)e  had  this  year,  upon  request.  We 
have  also  printed  posters  containing  Drivers'  Rules  and  Stable  Rules. 
These  rules  have  been  prepared  \\'!th  tlie  greatest  care,  and  have  been  sub- 
mitted to  the  best  experts  and  practical  men  that  we  could  rtnd  in  Boston 
and  New  York.     They  will  be  given  to  all  who  apply  for  them. 

BULLETINS 

The  Association  issued  in  1910  a  Bulletin  on  Watering  and  Bedding, 
by  Gilbert  Tompkins.  This  Bulletin  has  been  widely  read  and  highly  com- 
mended. A  revised  edition  was  published  in  August,  1911,  and  it  is  now 
reprinted,  with  some  additions,  at  the  end  of  this  catalogue,  where  will  be 
found  also  a  Bulletin  on  X'acations  for  Work-Horses.  We  believe  it  to  be  a 
fact  that  an  annual  vacation  for  the  work-horse,  and  especially  for  the  old 
work-horse,  is  a  matter  not  onl}'  of  humanity,  but  of  economy. 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins  issued  by  this  Association  may  be  had  free 
on  application.     The  Bulletins  thus  far  issued  are: — 

No.  1.     Watering  and  Bedding,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  2.     The  Disposal  of  Old  Horses,  by  Henry  C.  Merwin. 

No.  3.     The  Motor- Wagon  and  the  Work-Horse,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  4.  Vacations  for  Work-Horses,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins  and  Henry 
C.  Merwin. 

No.  5.  A  Bulletin  on  the  Feeding  of  Work-Horses,  by  Gilbert 
Tompkins,  is  in  preparation. 

THE  EQUINE  SHOWER  BATH 

For  the  past  two  years  during  excessively  hot  weather,  this  Association 
lias  maintained  nine  showering  stations  where  horses  were  showered  with 
water  from  hose  attached  to  a  hydrant,  or  were  sponged  ofT  by  means  of  water 
pails  and  sponges.  These  stations  were  at  Upham's  Corner,  Copley  Square, 
Park  Square,  Charles  St.,  Cambridge  St.,  Minot  St.,  Portland  St.,  Scollay 
Square,  and  Dock  Square.  We  are  indebted  to  the  following  persons  and 
corporations  for  the  free  use  of  their  water  and  hose,  and,  in  behalf  of 
the  horses,  we  most  earnestly  thank  them: — the  Pilgrim  Congregational 
Church,  the  Franklin  Savings  Bank,  M.  F.  Hanson  &  Co.,  the  Boston  Wine 
and  Spirit  Company,  the  Oriental  Tea  Company,  W.  D.  Quimby.  Thou- 
sands of  animals  were  refreshed  in  this  manner,  and  often  a  long  line  of 
panting  horses,  exhausted  by  the  heat,  were  waiting  their  turn. 

5 


This  showerini;  service  will  be  contiiuicd  in  the  current  \ear  on  any 
days  when  the  thermometer  is  85°  or  o\-er,  j)ro\i(le(l  that  we  have  money 
enough  on  hand  for  the  purpose. 

NON-RESIDENT  AGENTS 

We  hope  soon  to  ha\e  an  imjiaid  hut  sympathetic  agent,  man  or 
woman,  in  every  city  and  town  in  Massachusetts,  and  elsewhere  in  New 
England,  for  the  following  purposes:  To  distribute  our  Bulletins,  Posters 
and  other  publications;  to  rejiort  cases  of  cruelty;  to  organize  meetings 
and  Work-Horse  Parades;  to  assist  the  purchasers  of  horses  in  the  manner 
described  below. 

A  FREE  HOSPITAL  FOR  HORSES 

After  long  deliberation  and  with  many  misgivings,  on  account  of 
our  poverty,  the  Directors  have  decided  to  establish  in  Boston  a  free  hos- 
pital for  horses.  It  will  be  situated  at  the  North  End,  in  a  poor  district, 
and  will  be  a  rough,  cheap  affair,  but  conducted,  we  trust,  in  a  spirit  of 
hospitality  and  tenderness. 

This  is  intended  as  a  stop-gap,  until  the  \'ery  fine  hosi3ital,  contemi)lated 
by  the  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  is  erected.  We  have  no  intention  of  interfering 
with  that  society;  we  are  on  the  best  of  terms  with  them,  and  their  President 
is  one  of  our  most  highly  valued  Directors.  W'e  have  money  enough  in 
hand  or  promised  to  run  the  hospital  for  six  months,  and  will  trust  in 
Providence  for  the  future. 

ASSISTANCE  TO  PURCHASERS  OF  HORSES 

The  frauds  perpetrated  upon  buyers  of  horses,  and  the  cruelties  in- 
flicted upon  worn-out  animals  in  order  to  prepare  them  for  sale  have  greatly 
increased  during  recent  years.  To  combat  these  evils,  the  following 
scheme  has  been  devised : — W'e  have  made  a  contract  with  several  of  the 
leading,  reputable  dealers  in  Boston  and  the  vicinit>'  by  which  they  agree 
to  sell  a  good  horse  to  any  person  recommended  by  us,  and,  in  case  of  an}^ 
dispute  arising  from  the  sale,  to  abide  by  our  decision.  Any  person,  resident 
anywhere  in  New  England,  can  have  the  benefit  of  this  agreement  by 
calling  at  our  office  and  registering  his  name  and  address.  We  make  no 
charge  for  this  service  either  to  customer  or  dealer.  But,  in  order  not  to 
encourage  the  traffic  in  unfit  horses,  we  fix  a  mininumi  price,  and  do  not 
recommend  any  customer  unless  he  is  prepared  to  pa>-  that  sum.  At 
present,  the  minimum  price  is  $100  for  a  horse  under  1300  pounds;  ,1t;125 
for  a  horse  over  1300  pounds. 


STABLE  INSPECTION 

The  most  important  activity  of  this  Association,  next  to  the  Parade, 
and  perhaps  not  second  to  that,  is  the  system  of  Stable  Inspection. 

Entries  for  this  ma\-  be  made  at  any  time,  and  by  stables  of  all  kinds, 
including  livery,  hack  and  boarding  stables.  There  is  no  entry  fee.  The 
stables  are  judged,  not  in  competition  with  one  another,  but  accordingly 
as  they  satisfy  the  standard  fixed  by  the  Association.  The  prizes  are  un- 
limited in  number,  and  consist  mainly  of  silver  medals,  awarded  to  the 
proprietors  and  to  foremen  and  nightmen.  The  stables  and  the  foremen 
are  not  always  graded  alike.  Sometimes  a  foreman  makes  poor  use  of  the 
facilities  at  his  command,  and,  more  often,  a  good  foreman  has  to  struggle 
against  poor  facilities  and  bad  drivers.  The  Inspectors  are  the  most 
expert  and  impartial  men  that  we  can  find  in  Boston  or  elsewhere.  Their 
reports  are  confidential,  and  are  communicated  only  to  the  proprietor  of 
the  stable.  The  number  of  horses  in  the  stables  inspected  every  year  is 
about  4,000. 

FAULTS  IN  STABLES 

Our  Inspectors  have  found  the  most  common  faults  in  Work-Horse 
stables  to  be  as  follow^s: — 

(1)  Scanty  bedding. 

(2)  Failure  to  bed  the  horses  on  Sundays  and  holidays  in  the  daytime. 

(3)  Failure  to  water  the  horses  at  night  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay. 

(4)  Failure  to  keep  the  horses'  feet  soft. 

(5)  Poor  grooming. 

STABLE  INSPECTION  REPORT 

The  following  is  a  copy  of  the  printed  form  for  the  Inspector's  report: — 
The  Inspectors  are  requested  to  report  on  the  following  matters  and 
any  others  that  may  occur  to  them: — 

1.  How  the  horses  are  brought  to  the  stable  by  the  drivers,   whether 
in  a  heatetl  condition  or  not. 

2.  Manners  and  appearance  of  the  horses,  as  showing  whether  they 
have  been  handled  kindly  or  roughly. 

3.  Bodily  condition  of  horses. 

4.  Condition  of  horses'  feet. 

5.  Are  the  horses  well  groomed? 

6.  Examine  the  horses  for  galls  or  other  sores,  and  state  how  many, 
if  any,  are  galled. 

7.  Is  the  harness  clean  and  well  oiled;  and  especially  are  the  insides 
of  the  collars  clean? 

8.  Ventilation  of  stable  and  hay  loft. 


9.     Cleanliness  of  stable,  hay  loft  and  waterinii  troui^hs. 

10.  Drainage,  and  disposal  of  manure. 

11.  Temperature  of  stable,  and  whether  tlie  horses  are  subjected  to 
draughts  or  not. 

12.  Size  and  character  of  stalls^ — width  and  lengtli. 

13.  Amount  of  bedding;  and  are  the  horses  bedded  during  the  day 
on  Sundays,  and  when  they  stand  in  the  stable  on  other  days? 

14.  Hours  of   feeding  and   watering;   and   especially  are   the   horses 
watered  after  eating  their  hay  at  night? 

15.  Quality  and  amount  of  hay  and  grain  fed. 

16.  Bran  mash, — when  given. 

17.  Salt,  when  and  how  given. 

18.  Blanketing  of  horses  in  stable. 

19.  (In  large  stables)  is  there  a  drying  room  for  blankets? 

20.  Are  there  rain-covers  for  the  horses,  or  two  sets  of  blankets — one 
for  wet  weather? 


lark? 


Signature  of  Inspector. 
Date 


For  the  prizes  awarded  this  ^^ar  to  stables  and  stablemen  see  the 
pages  at  the  end  of  the  entry  list. 

The  Association  is  indebted  to  the  following  Stable  Inspectors  for 
their  very  careful  and  conscientious  work: — 

E.  F.  COLDWELL  ROBERT  MASON 

J.  B.   MATTHEWS  J.  W.  WHITNEY 

A.  G.  ROBINSON  D.  J.  DELANEY 

For  advice  and  co-operation  in  all  our  undertakings  we  are  also  espe- 
cially indebted  to  Dr.  F.  J.  Sullivan,  Dr.  D.  L.  Bolger  and  Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon. 

THE  DISPOSAL  OF  OLD  HORSES 

It  is  a  melancholy  fact  that  many  of  the  fine  horses  to  be  seen  in  the 
Parade  this  year  wall  be  sold  when  they  become  old,  stifT  or  lame,  and 
will,  in  many  cases,  suffer  great  misery  before  death  releases  them.  There 
is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  community  that  old  or  disabled  horses  should 
not  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  otherwise  disposed  of  in  a  humane 
manner.  To  sell  a  worn-out  horse,  and  thus  consign  him  to  a  slow  and 
painful  death,  will  be  looked  ui)()n  years  hence  as  an  almost  incredible 
cruelty. 


RED  ACRE  FARM  AND  PINE  RIDGE 

We  act  as  agents  for  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses  at  Stow, 
and  inquiries  about  the  Farm,  and  how  horses  can  be  sent  there,  will  be 
answered  at  any  time  by  letter  or  telephone.  Any  horse  which  is  a  subject 
for  charity  ma>-  be  sent  to  the  Farm  by  anybody,  at  any  time,  without 
notice;  and  the  animal  will  be  cared  for.  The  post-office  address  of  the 
Farm  is  South  Acton,  Mass.  The  railroad  station  is  South  Acton.  The 
telephone  is  West  Acton  8. 

Under  the  laws  of  Massachusetts  (Chap.  133  of  the  Acts  of  the  year 
1908)  cities  and  towns  may  turn  over  their  old  or  disabled  horses  to  Red 
Acre  Farm,  or  to  any  other  incorporated  society  for  the  relief  of  dumb 
animals.  Boston,  Somerville,  Brookline,  Waltham  and  other  municipalities 
have  availed  themselves  of  this  law,  instead  of  selling  the  animals  at  auction. 

Pine  Ridge,  the  annex  at  Dedham  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League,  is 
ready  at  any  time  to  receive  horses  that  need  rest  or  treatment.  Appli- 
cation should  be  made  to  the  League  at  51  Carver  Street,  Boston.  Pine 
Ridge  is  only  10  miles  out,  and  is  thus  a  convenient  place  in  which  to  give 
horses  a  vacation. 

OUR  RESOURCES 

This  Association  has  no  endowment  whatever,  and  although  our  offi- 
cers receive  no  compensation  for  their  services  and  our  rent  is  small,  we 
are  continually  hampered  by  lack  of  money.  Were  it  not,  indeed,  for  the 
generosity  of  a  few  women,  we  could  not  carry  on  the  Parade.  We  are 
especially  indebted  to  Mrs.  David  Nevins,  Mrs.  R.  A.  Lawrence,  Mrs.  B. 
T.  Morrison,  Mrs.  R.  D.  Evans  and  Mrs.  Francis  Peabody.  We  beg  for 
assistance  from  those  who  love  horses  or  are  distressed  by  their  sufferings. 


ELEVENTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1913 


N^'  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  out  of 
condition  or  wears  an  over-draw  check,  will  be  disqualified. 
Every  entry  not  cHsqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon, 
either  first  (bhie),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow).  In  the 
Old  Horse  C'lass  highly  commended  ribbons  are  awarded, 
which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other  classes. 

F^ach  blue  ribbon  winner  will  receive  a  brass    medal 
to  be  worn  as  a  jjermanent  ornament  on  the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be 
awarded.  The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  de- 
served, subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(1)  Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green  horses, 
and,, if  possible,  not  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any  horse, 
unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type  and 
good  quality.* 

MANNERS 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the  horse  has 
been  treated  kindly. 

COLOR 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count,  even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 

BLINDNESS 

A  blind  horse  is  not  disqualified. 

THE  VEHICLE 

The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry  or  reduce  the 
grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 


■For  what  is  meant  by  quality,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  catalogue. 

10 


THE  HARNESS 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especially  in  the 
collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  recei\e  a  prize  in  former  years  by 
reason  of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in 
the  harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  breeching  too  low  down,  and  inside 
reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of  it, 
is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in 
respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required. 
Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments 
should  not  be  used. 

Housings  for  collars,  except  for  use  in  rain-storms,  are  strongly  dis- 
approved by  the  Association  as  being  unnecessary,  expensive  and  adding 
to  the  weight  of  the  harness. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association,  and  shown  in  a 
photograph  printed  in  this  catalogue,  weighs  only  53  pounds,  collar  and  all, 
and  it  is  big  enough  for  any  1350-pound  horse.  Horses  of  that  weight  fre- 
quently carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The  bridle  shown  in  the 
photograph  weighs  less  than  two  pounds — about  half  the  usual  weight. 

DRIVERS'  BADGES 

A  medal  or  badge,  to  be  worn  on  the  person,  will  be  given  to  every 
driver  who  shows  in  the  Parade,  in  good  condition  and  serviceably  sound, 
the  same  horse  or  horses  shown  by  him  in  the  Parade  of  the  year  before.  (In 
case  of  four-horse  teams,  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  were 
shown  by  him  the  previous  year.) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  driver,  all  things 
considered;  and  silver  badges  will  be  given  to  the  twenty  who  rank  next.* 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  be  ambitious  to 
obtain  one  of  these"  badges,  and  that  possession  of  the  badge  will  be  the 
best  recommendation  that  a  driver  could  have. 

SPECIAL  PRIZES 

In    memory  of   R.   A.   Lawrence,   its   first   President,   the  Association 
offers  a  gold  medal  to  the  owner  and  a  silver  medal  to  the  driver,  for  the 


*The  following  gold  and  silver  Itadgcs  were  awarded  in  1912: 

Gold  Badges:  Thomas  Barrett,  Remus  Burt. 

Silver  Badges:  John  Anderson,  John  Arnold,  Louis  Bierweiler,  F.  H.  Buckley,  John  Coyne,  Joseph 
Cronin,  Frank  T.  Daley,  Joseph  H.  Doherty,  Fred  DeCorsey,  William  T.  Dunbar,  C.  E.  Everton,  John  B. 
Fay,  Fred  Feyler,  M.  J.  Flynn,  James  Gagan,  Patrick  Hennessey,  D.  F.  Lally,  Joseph  Leach,  Michael 
O'Neil,  William  Parrott,  Barney  Portnoi,  M.  J.  Shuckrowe,  J.T.  Stewart,  John  L.  Thomas,  C.  G.Vaughn, 
Patrick  Welch,  Patrick  White. 

11 


best  four-horse  team  in  the  Parade,   provided  also  that  the  driver    takes 
rare  of  his  horses.     There  are  second  and  third  prizes  in  this  Class. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums 
of  money,  are  offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse  and  other  classes 
1)\  the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals,  American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Rescue  League, 
Red  Acre  Farm,  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington,  John  W.  Whitney,  W.  D. 
Quimby,  George  W.  Harrington,  James  Forgie's  Sons,  Dr.  D.  P.  Keogh  and 
Fire  Commissioner  Charles  H.  Cole. 

DRIVING  COMPETITION 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four-horse  and  six-horse  teams  will  be  held 
in  or  near  Commonwealth  Avenue,  while  the  judging  is  taking  place. 
Entries  for  this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first 
prize  will   be  a  silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 

U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

There  is  a  class  for  the  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  who 
have  horses;  of  these  there  are  about  thirty- five.  Their  yearly  allowance 
for  providing  and  maintaining  a  horse  and  wagon  is  only  $350.  This 
sum  is  very  inadequate.  The  men  do  their  best,  but  their  horses  and 
wagons  make  a  poor  showing.  Onl}^  one  has  made  an  entry  in  the  Parade 
of  1913. 

NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing-stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.  The  horses  pass  the  reviewing-stand 
at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclosed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  alw^ays  apparent,  frequently 
exclude  a  fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 
and  that  green  horses  are  discriminated  against. 

SYSTEM  OF  JUDGING 

Those  classes  in  which  special  prizes  are  awarded,  namely.  Fire  De- 
partments, Old  Horses,  Reconstructed  Horses,  Four-Horse  1'eams,  Owners' 
and  Foremen's  Runabout  Horses,  Barrel-Racks,  Hucksters,  Local  Expresses, 

12 


and  the  five  Championship  classes,  are  judged  by  tw(j  Judges  for  each 
class  who  inspect  the  horses,  and  see  t^em  move.  The  other  classes,  com- 
prising about  four-fifths  of  the  Parade,  are  judged  by  two  sets  of  Judges 
in   the  following  manner: — 

As  soon  as  the  classes  are  in  order,  they  start  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand,  with  a  distance  of  twenty  feet  between  each  entry. 

Two  veterinarians  are  stationed  about  fift}'  yards  down  the  line, 
and  the  horses  approach  them  at  a  slow  trot.  The  veterinarians  inspect 
the  horses  as  they  approach,  halt  them  if  necessary,  and  shunt  oft"  from 
the  line  any  that  are  lame. 

If  the  owner  or  driver  of  a  horse  thus  shunted  ofT  thinks  that  a  mis- 
take has  been  made,  he  may  ask  the  veterinarians  to  test  his  horse  again, 
and  in  that  case  the  veterinarians  will  give  the  horse  another  trial  later. 

Those  entries  not  excluded  for  lameness  proceed  at  a  w^alk,  and  are 
judged  by  two  experts  stationed  fifty  yards  further  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand.  They  "  size  up  "  the  horses  as  they  approach,  halt  them  for  a 
moment,  if  necessary,  and  look  them  over,  and  then  decide  on  the  grade  of 
ribbon  which  the  entry  is  to  receive, — or  decide  that  the  entry  is  to  receive 
nothing;  and  their  decision,  w^ithout  announcing  it  to  the  driver,  is  tele- 
phoned by  an  assistant  to  the  reviewing-stand.  Each  entry  carries  a  num- 
ber corresponding  with  the  number  in  the  catalogue,  so  that  this  can 
easily  be  done. 

This  plan  has  worked  successfully  for  two  years. 

NOTICE  TO  THE  PUBLIC 

Is  it  not  possible,  we  are  often  asked,  for  a  man  to  have  a  few  good- 
looking  horses  in  the  Parade,  while  at  home  he  has  five  or  ten  times  as 
many  in  poor  condition?  We  answer.  No.  We  reserve  the  right  to  inspect 
all  the  horses  in  the  stable  of  an  applicant  for  a  place  in  the  Parade;  and 
every  year  we  exclude  many  entries  on  the  ground  that  the  owner's  treat- 
ment of  his  horses  in  general  is  not  humane.  In  other  cases,  when  the  treat- 
ment of  the  owner's  horses  is  good  in  most  respects,  but  not  up  to  the 
standard  in  others,  we  request  the  owner  to  make  such  reforms  as  are 
needed;  and  it  is  very  seldom  that  he  refuses. 

The  advertising  value  of  a  place  in  the  Parade  is  now  very  great,  and 
we  intend  that  no  inhumane  owner  of  a  horse  shall  have  the  benefit  of  it. 

The  Public  may  take  the  presence  of  a  horse  in  this  Parade 
as  an  assurance  that  the  owner  is  a  humane  man  in  his  treatment 
of  horses  generally. 

Our  Judges  are  selected  upon  the  same  principle. 

13 


THE   NUMBER   OF   FIRMS  REPRESENTED  IN  THE  PARADE 


Year 

uti;i 

1912 

1911 

5;m 

453 

461 

Year 

191.1 

1912 

1911 

1210 

1048 

1015 

Year 

1st 

2d 

3d 

1912 

601 

178 

53 

1911 

454 

210 

82 

1910 

499 

208 

91 

1909 

404 

197 

77 

1908 

362 

155 

70 

1907 

237 

147 

97 

1906 

165 

129 

94 

Year 

1913 

1912 

1911 

27 

29 

36 

Year 

1913 

1912 

1911 

315 

332 

327 

19(19 

l!Hif<      19(17 

1906 

19(15 

19(14 

1903 

300 

« 

VIBER 

258      233 
OF  ENTRIES 

181 

203 

174 

1.54 

1909 

1908     1!«)7 

1906 

1905 

1904 

1903 

847 

738      685 

593 

5.30 

444 

433 

906 

PRIZES  AWARDED 

4th  .5th  H.C. 

4  9 

4  7 


26 

2 

873 

26 

56 

839 

17 

68 

866 

30 

83 

802 

23 

34 

655 

39 

43 

625 

24 

38 

543 

PRIZES  TO  VETERAN   DRIVERS 

1910      1909     1908      1907  1906 

38       37       19       23  24 

DRIVERS'  BADGES 

1910     1909     1908     1907  1906 

288      190      394      505  366 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE 

Horses  walked  on  starting  out  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and 
at  night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

[^egs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or 
if  the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar,  saddle  and 
crupper. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only, 
horses  wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge 
on  coming  in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing 
the  horse,  much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not 
much,  on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.  (In  any  case, 
watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay.  This  is 
especially  necessary  in  summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday 
noon;  cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter.  A 
mash  twice  a  week  if  work  is  light. 

A  lump  or  block  of  salt  always  within 
reach  of  the  horse. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie 
with  heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or  grated 
in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for 
the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all — Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE 

Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morn- 
ing, and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing 
hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  clean- 
ing or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no 
matter  how  hot  ;  or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating 
their  hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night,  and 
horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  — ■  too  much 
trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody  hap- 
pens to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean  ;  sweat  allowed  to  ac- 
cumulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway,  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up 
dirty. 

Stable  close —  no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the 
horses'  heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  even- 
ing and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken;  doors  left  open;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot 
nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge; 
no  bathtub. 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about  ;  general  atmosphere  of 
noise  and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out 
or  put  up,  nor  on  Sundays. 


15 


DRIVERS'  RULES 


1.  Start  at  a  walk,  and  let  your  horse  work  very  easily  for  the  first  half   hour. 

2.  A  heavy  draft  horse  should  never  be  driven  faster  than  a  walk,  with  or  without 
a  load. 

3.  Look  to  your  harness.      Avoid  these  faults  especially  : — 

Bridle  too  long  or  too  short. 

Blinders  pressing  on  the  eye  or  flapping.      (An  open  bridle  is  best  for  most 

horses.) 
Throat-latch  too  tight. 

Collar  too  tight  or  too  loose,  or  dirty  on  the  inside. 
Shaft-girth  too  loose. 
Traces  too  long. 

Breeching  too  low  down  or  too  loose. 
Inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs. 

4.  Do  not  let  your  horse  drive  himself;  but  handle  the  reins  gently.  Never  jerk 
the  reins  ; — to  do  that  is  the  sure  mark  of  a  bad  driver. 

5.  Try  to  deliver  your  load  with  as  little  backing  as  possible.  Backing  a  heavy 
load  is  apt  to  strain  the  hind  legs. 

6.  Take  the  horse  out  of  the  shafts  as  much  as  possible  ;  and  if  you  drive  a  pair  or 
four,  unfasten  the  outside  traces  while  the  horses  are  standing  ;   they  will  rest  better  that  way. 

7.  Teach  your  horses  to  go  into  the  collar  gradually.  When  a  load  is  to  be  started, 
speak  to  the  horses  and  take  a  firm  hold  of  the  reins  so  that  they  will  arch  their  necks,  keep 
their  legs  under  them,  and  step  on  their  toes.  A  loose  rein  means  sprawling  and  slipping, 
often  with  one  horse  ahead  of  the  other. 

8.  Water  your  horse  as  often  as  possible.  Water  in  moderate  quantities  will  not 
hurt  him,  so  long  as  he  keeps  moving. 

9.  Blanket  your  horse  carefully  when  he  stands,  especially  if  he  is  at  all  hot.  Re- 
peated slight  chills  stififen  and  age  a  horse  before  his  time. 

10.  Bring  your  horse  in  cool  and  breathing  easily.  If  he  comes  in  hot,  he  will 
sweat  in  the  stable,  and  the  sudden  stoppage  of   hard  work  is  bad  for  his  feet. 

11.  In  hot  weather  or  in  drawing  heavy  loads,  watch  your  horse's  breathing.  If  he 
breathes  hard,  or  short  and  quick,  it  is  time  to  stop. 

12.  Remember  that  the  horse  is  the  most  nervous  of  all  animals,  and  that  little  things 
annoy  and  irritate  him.  Remember  that  he  will  be  contented  or  miserable  accordingly  as 
you  treat  him. 

16 


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STABLE  RULES 


9 


The  best  order  in  feeding  is  :  — 
Water,  hay,  water  again,  grain. 

Never  give  grain  to  a  tired  horse.      Let  him  rest  and   nibble   hay  for   an   hour  or 
two  first.      Grain  in  the  manger  before  the  horse  comes  in  looks  bad. 

3.  Water  the  horses  as  often  as  possible  ;  but  let  the  horse  that  comes  in  hot  drink 
a  few  swallows  only. 

4.  Always  water  the  horse  after  he  has  eaten  his  hay  at  night.  Do  not  go  to  bed 
leaving  him  thirsty  all  night. 

v5.  Do  not  forget  to  salt  the  horse  once  a  week  ;  or,  better  yet,  keep  salt  always 
before  him.     He  knows  best  how  much  he  needs. 

6.  Give  a  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday  noon  ;  and  on  Wednesday  night 
also,  if  work  is  slack.  After  a  long  day  in  very  cold  or  wet  weather,  a  hot  mash,  half  bran 
and  half  oats,  with  a  tablespoonful  of  ginger,  will  do  the  horse  good.  Put  very  little  salt,  if 
any,  in  the  mash. 

7.  If  the  horse  does  not  eat  well,  or  slobbers,  examine  his  teeth. 

8.  Keep  a  good,  deep,  dry  bed  under  the  horse  while  he  is  in  the  stable,  day  or 
night,  on  Sundays  especially.     The  more  he  lies  down,  the  longer  his  legs  and  feet  will  last. 

9.  In  order  to  do  well,  the  horse  must  be  kept  warm.  Give  him  a  blanket  on  cool 
nights  in  late  summer  or  early  fall,  and  an  extra  blanket  on  an  extra  cold  night  in  winter. 

10.  In  cold  rains  do  not  tie  up  the  horse's  tail.  The  long  tail  prevents  the  water 
from  running  down  the  inside  of  his  legs,  and  keeps  off  a  current  of  air  from  his  belly. 

11.  Take  off  the  harness,  collar  and  all,  when  the  horse  comes  in  to  feed.  He  will 
rest  better  without  it. 

12.  Never  put  a  horse  up  dirty  or  muddy  for  the  night.  At  least  brush  his  legs  and 
belly,  and  straighten  his  hair. 

13.  In  hot  weather,  and  in  all  weathers  if  the  horse  is  hot,  sponge  his  eyes,  nose, 
dock,  the  harness  marks,  and  the  inside  of   his  hind-quarters  when  he  first  comes  in. 

14.  When  the  horse  comes  in  wet  with  rain,  first  scrape  him,  then  blanket  him,  and 
rub  his  head,  neck,  loins  and  legs.  If  the  weather  is  cold  put  on  an  extra  blanket  in  20 
minutes.  Change  the  wet  blanket  when  the  horse  dries.  DO  NOT  WASH  THE  LEGS. 
Rub  them  dry,  or  bandage  loosely  with  thick  bandages.  It  is  far  more  important  to  have 
the  legs  warm  and  dry  than  clean. 

15.  Examine  the  horse's  feet  when  he  comes  in,  and  wash  them  if  he  does  not  wear 
pads.  If  a  horse  in  the  city  is  not  shod  in  front  with  pads,  tar  and  oakum,  which  is  the  best 
way,  it  is  absolutely  necessary  to  keep  his  feet  soft  by  packing  the.m,  or  by  wrapping  a  wet 
piece  of  old  blanket  or  carpet  around  the  foot,  or  by  applying  some  hoof  dressing  or  axle  oil, 
inside  and  out,  at  least  three  times  a  week. 

16.  Let  the  horse  have  a  chance  to  roll  as  often  as  possible  ;  it  will  rest  and  refresh 
him.  Give  him  a  little  clean  earth  or  a  piece  of  sod  to  eat  now  and  then  ;  he  craves  it,  and 
it  is  good  for  his  stomach  and  blood. 

17.  Speak  gently  to  the  horse,  and  do  not  swear  or  yell  at  him.  He  is  a  gentleman 
by  instinct,  and  should  be  treated  as  such.  The  stable  is  the  horse's  home,  and  it  is  your 
privilege  to  make  it  a  happy' one. 

17 


HOT-WEATHER  RULES 


1.  Load  lightly,  and  drive  slowly. 

2.  Stop  in  the  shade  if  possible. 

3.  Water  your  horse  as  often  as  possible.  So  long  as  a  horse  is  working,  water  in 
moderate  quantities  will  not  hurt  him.  But  let  him  drink  only  a  few  swallows  if  he  is  going 
to  stand  still. 

4.  When  he  ccmes  in  after  work,  sponge  ofiE  the  harness  marks  and  sweat,  his 
eyes,  his   nose  and  mouth,  and  the  dock.     Wash  his  feet  but  not  his  legs. 

5.  If  the  thermometer  is  75  degrees  or  higher,  wipe  him  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge. 
Use  vinegar  water  if  possible.     Do  not  turn  the  hose  on  him. 

6.  Saturday  night,  give  a  bran  mash,  cold  ;   and  add   a  tablespoonful  of  saltpetre. 

7.  Do  not  use  a  horse-hat,  unless  it  is  a  canopy-top  hat.  The  ordinary  bell-shaped 
hat  does  more  harm  than  good. 

8.  A  sponge  on  top  of  the  head,  or  even  a  cloth,  is  good  if  kept  wet.  If  dry  it  is 
worse  than  nothing. 

9.  If  the  horse  is  overcome  by  heat,  get  him  into  the  shade,  remove  harness  and 
bridle,  wash  out  his  mouth,  sponge  him  all  over,  shower  his  legs  and  give  him  four  ounces 
of  aromatic  spirits  of  ammonia,  or  two  ounces  of  sweet  spirits  of  nitre,  in  a  pint  of  water, 
or  give  him  a  pint  of  cofifee  warm.  Cool  his  head  at  once,  using  cold  water,  or,  if  neces- 
sary, chopped  ice,  wrapped  in  a  cloth. 

10.  If  the  horse  is  off  his  feed,  try  him  with  two  quarts  of  oats  mixed  with  bran, 
and  a  little  water;  and  add  a  little  salt  or  sugar.  Or  give  him  oatmeal  gruel  or  barley 
water  to  drink. 

11.  Watch  your  horse.  If  he  stops  sweating  suddenly,  or  if  he  breathes  short  and 
quick,  or  if  his  ears  droop,  or  if  he  stands  with  his  legs  braced  sideways,  he  is  in  danger  of 
a  heat  or  sun  stroke  and  needs  attention  at  once. 

12.  If  it  is  so  hot  that  the  horse  sweats  in  the  stable  at  night,  tie  him  outside.  Un- 
less he  cools  of?  during  the  night,  he  cannot  well  stand  the  next  day's  heat. 


18 


Wn.LIAM    D.    QUIMBY 


ARTHUR  GILBERT  MERWIN  DR.  P.  J.  CRONON 


Cfjaplain 

THE  REV.  FREDERICK  M.  WHITE 


Francis  Peabody 
Arthur  Perrin 
Joshua  Atwood,  3rd 
John  H.  Jewett 
James  I.  Brooks 
H.  J.  QuiMBY 
Herbert  C,  Currier 


Dennis  Neyland 
William  J.  Brady 
William  Selby 
Robert  Mason 
Fred  L.  Jordan 
John  W.  Whitney 
Howard  L.  Carpenter 


Albert  B.  Lewis 
R.  D.  Carter 
Phillip  S.  Greeley 
George  Hicks 
T.  Watts  Davies 
G.  Burton  Milliman 
Francis  E.  Slater 


Robert  J.  Taylor 


l^eterinarp  Sns^pector 

DR.  FRANK   J.  SULLIVAN 


Msifjcrg 


A.  L.  Berry 


Jubgesi 


ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  J.  M. 

BAKER,  JAMES  E. 
BALKAM,  DR.  R.  W. 
BARNES,  DR.  \V.  E. 
BARTLETT,  \V.  R. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BOLGER,  DR.  D.  L. 
BRAY,  \V.  C. 
BRIGHAM.W.  E. 
BUNKER,  DR.  MADISON 
BrTLER,\V.  L. 

CLEAVES,  DR.  A.  S. 
COLDWELL,  E.  F. 
COLE,  \V.  K. 
COLLL\SON,C.  M.  B. 
CULLEN,  DR.  DAVID 

DELANEV,  D.  J. 
DELANO,  DR.  CHAS.  \V. 
DEWS,  DR.  HARRY 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  W. 
DIMMER,  R.  G. 
DUNCAN,  JOHN 


FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 

GILLIGAN,  J.T. 
GORDON,  JOHN 

HARDING,  R.  W. 
HARRINGTON.  GEO.  W. 
HARRISON,  CAPT.  RODEN 
HILL,  DR.  A.  (;. 
HOLDEN,  C.  B. 
HUMPHREVILLE,  DR.  J.  F. 

KENNETT,  r.  a. 

kenney,  j.  r. 
lan(;lan,  thos. 


MACK,  THOMAS  W. 
MacWILLIAMS,  p.  T. 
MASON,  ROBERT 
MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MANWELL,  GILBERT 

19 


MAXWELL,  J.  P. 
MAY,  DR.  A.  W. 
McMANUS,  H.  P. 
MEREDITH,  JAMES 
MERWIN,  A.  G. 
MILLER,  CLIFFORD  G. 

OSGOOD,  DR.  F.  H. 

PERRY,  DR.  CHAS.  H. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 

ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,  J.  E. 
ROLLIN,  DR.  J.  H. 

S1BLE^^  DR.  R.  A. 
SOUTHER,  DR.  H.  A. 
SULLI\AN,  DR.  F.  J. 
SULLIVAN,  J.  H. 

WADSWORTH,  DR.  S.  F. 
WALKER,  FRED  F. 
WIIITTEMORE,  W.  P. 


THE  FOLLOWING  DRIVERS  ACT  AS  AIDS 
IN  THEIR  RESPECTIVE  CLASSES 


M.  J.  SHEA, 

CLAYTON  E.  EX'ERTON, 
JOHN  L.  SULLIXAN, 
PATRICK  HENNESSEY, 
RICHARD  POWELL 
HENRY  CLARK, 
JAMES  JENSEN, 
MARTIN  TALLENT, 
JOHN  W.  BOWKER, 
H.  A.  BREEN, 
W.  P.  SEYMOUR, 
J.  F.  MURPHY, 
A.  B.  TORRENCE, 
JAMES  HAY, 
FRANK  F.  CAPEN, 
ALFRED  J.  GODDARD, 
PATRICK  E.  BURKE, 
EDWARD  J.  SWEENEY, 
JOSEPH  W.  HARRIS, 
FRANK  C.  MUTZ, 
JOHN  W.  BROWN, 
THOMAS  S.  DESMOND, 
GUILFORD  SAUNDERS, 
FREDERICK  L.  McCARTn\ 
JOSEPH  A.  LEACH, 
PATRICK  WELCH, 
FRED  L.  DAVIDSON, 
G.  FRED  SEAMON, 
MAURICE  J.  FLYNN, 

CHARLES  G.  VAUGHN, 
WILLIAM  ARGY, 

JOHN  W.  WHITNEY, 
GEORGE  FARRELL, 
DAVID  AITON, 
EDWARD  D'STACIO, 
ROBERT  F.  ATWOOD, 
FREDERICK  E.  WEIR, 
THOMAS  F.  BANNISTER, 
WILLIAM  J.    COILEY, 
R.  E.  HARRINGTON, 
MARK  H.  SIMONDS, 
HERBERT  A.  LEA, 
ALFRED  HOYLE, 
BERTRAM  MILROY, 


Deliveries,  Newspapers. 

Milk. 

Bakers. 

Laundry. 

Deliveries,  Miscellaneous. 

"  Department  Stores. 

Furniture  Makers  and  Movers. 
Provisions,  Light  Horses. 

"        Heavy   " 
Confectioners. 
Grocers. 


Public  Service  Corporations. 

Oil  Dealers. 

Manufacturers. 

Builders  and  Building  Material. 

Metals  and  Junk. 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers. 

Hay  and  Grain. 

Lumber. 

Ice. 

Contractors. 

Coke  and  Charcoal. 

Coal. 

Truckmen. 

Championship,  Singles,  Light  Horses. 

Championship,       Singles,       Middleweight       <>r 

W^agon  Horses. 
Championship,  Singles,   Heavy  Horses. 
Championship,    Doubles  and   Upwards,    Heavy 

Horses. 
Old  Horses,  Division  A. 
Old  Horses,  Division  B. 
Old  Horses,  Division  C. 
Old  Horses,  Division  D. 
Old  Horses,  Division  E. 
Champion  Old  Horses. 
Barrel  Racks. 
Hucksters,  Division  A. 
Hucksters,  Division  B. 
Hucksters,  Division  C. 
Express,  Division  A. 
Express,  Division  B. 
Express,  Division  C. 


20 


LIST  OF  CONTRIBUTORS 


A.  E.  D. 

Agassiz,  R.  L. 

Aiken,  Mrs.  Walter 

Allen,  C.  W. 

Allen,  Frank  E. 

Allen,  Miss  Sarah  M. 

American     Humane     Education 

SocictN' 
Ames,  Airs.  William  H. 
Angell,  Mrs.  (ieorge  T. 
Animal  Rescue  League 

Bacon,  Miss  Louisa  C 

Bacon,  Miss  M.  P. 

Baker,  Miss  Edith  C. 

Bancroft,  Maj.  Gen'l  \Vm.  A. 

Bartol,  Dr.  J.  \V. 

Bartlett,  N.  S. 

Baylies,  Walter  C. 

Beebe,  E.  Pierson 

Beebe,  Miss  Emily 

Blake,  Mrs.  Arthur  W. 

Blake,  Miss  Marion  L. 

Boit,  Mrs.  R.  A. 

Boston  Ice  Co. 

Brooks,  Fred 

Bryant,  Mrs.  Elizabeth  B. 

Burdett,  Everett  W. 

Burr,  Mrs.  H.  M. 

Burr,  L  Tucker 

Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

Campbell,  C.  A. 

Carr,  Samuel 

Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Clark,  Henry  M. 

Clark,  Miss  L.  Freeman 

Clarke,  Miss  M.  A. 

Cole,  C.  H.,  Fire  Commissioner 

Cooper,  Henry  M. 

Crocker,  George  G. 

Crofts,  Miss  Clemence 

Cunningham,  Frederic 

Curtis,  E. 

Davenport,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Day,  Miss  Mary  E. 
Deland,  Mrs.  Margaret 
Dempsey,  P.  &  Co. 
Devlin,  Mrs.  John  E. 
Dexter,  Gordon 
Dodd,  Miss  Ethel 
Dorc,  -Annie  Moulton 


Eaton,  Miss  Harriet  L. 
Eaton,  Miss  Mary  S. 
Eaton,  Miss  Julia  F. 
"E.  C.  J." 

Farnsworth,  Mrs.  Lucy  H. 
Fearing,  Mrs.  Mary  P. 
Fish,  Frederic  P. 
Fisher,  Miss  Annie  E. 
Forbes,  J.  Murray 
Forgie's,  James,  Sons 
Foster,  Mrs.  Reginald 

Gay,  Mrs.  F.  L. 
Gilman,  O.  B. 
Goddard,  Miss  Julia 
Grew,  Edward  W. 

Hall,  George  G. 
Harrington,  George  W. 
Haskell,  Allen 
Hathaway,  Mrs.  J.  F. 
Hayes,  Miss  Mary  H. 
Haynes,  Miss  E.  C. 
Hemenway,  Augustus 
Hittinger,  Mrs.  Jacob 
Howe,  Albert 
Hudson,  Mis.  John  E. 
Hunt,  Mrs.  David 
Hunt,  William  D. 

lasigi.  Miss  Nora 

In  Memory  of  "  A.  R." 

Keith,  B.  F. 

Kendall,  The  Misses  (New  York) 

Kidder,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Charles  A. 

Lander,  Miss  L.  A. 
Lawrence,  John 
Lee,  Mrs.  Joseph 
Lincoln,  Miss  Martha 
Loring,  Miss  H.  B. 
Loring,  Miss  Helen 
Loring,  Mrs.  Thacher 
Lowell,  Miss  Georgiana 

Manning,  Miss  A.  F. 
Marble,  Mrs.  T.  J. 
Massachusetts  S.  P.  C.  A. 
Mason,  Miss  E.  F. 
Mason,  Miss  Ida  M. 
Masters,  E.  C. 
Moors,  Mrs.  Francis  J. 


Morison,  Mrs.  John  H. 
Morse,  Dr.  H.  L. 
Moseley,  Miss  E.  F. 
Munroe,  Miss  E.  F. 

Newburyport  S.  P.  C.  A. 

"Ormonde" 

Page,  Dr.  Calvin  G. 

Parker,  Francis  S. 

Parsons,  The  Misses 

Peabody,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Francis 

Peabody,  Philip  G. 

Pickman,  D.  L. 

Pillsbury,  A.  E. 

"  Plymouth  " 

Quimby,  W.  D. 

Red  Acre  Farm 
Richardson,  Dr.  William  L. 
Rodman,  Miss  Emma 

Saltonstall,  R.  M. 
Sampson,  Miss  Lucy 
Sawyer,  Clifford  D. 
Shattuck,  George  B. 
Siegel,  Henry  Co. 
Sprague,  Dr.  F.  P. 
Stackpole,  Miss  Roxana 
Staniford,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Steele,  Miss  Caroline  B. 
Storer,  Elizabeth  W. 
Storer,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Sturgis,  Mrs.  Robert  S. 
Swift,  Henry  W. 

Thayer,  Mrs.  E.  R. 

Ward,  Miss  Elizabeth  J. 
Wheelwright,  Miss  Mary  C. 
White,  Mrs.  Charles  T. 
White,  Miss  Gertrude  R. 
White,  R.  H.  Co. 
Whitney,  John  W. 
Wigglesworth,  George 
Williams,  Ralph  B. 
Wilson,  Edith  C. 
Wood,  Annie  L. 

Young,  Mrs.  Benjamin  L. 
Young,  Miss  Emily  W. 
Young,  Miss  Isobel 


Mrs.  David  Nevins 


Mrs.  B.  T.  Morri- 


Mrs.  R.  A.  Lawi 


Mrs.  R.  D.  Evans 


21 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS 

The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in 
the  Parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer 
or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer,  l^he  Association  gives  a  second  prize  of  five  dollars 
to  the  driver  with  the  second  longest  term,  and  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in 
this  class  (the  prize  winner  excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 

Years  of 

H.  J.  Baird 

20 

Lawrence  &  Wiggin 

21 

Atlantic  Works 

22 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

22 

Fells  Ice  Co. 

22 

Paine  Furniture  Co. 

23 

Howard  Bros. 

25 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

25 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

25 

City  of  Boston 

25 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co. 

27 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

27 

E.  R.  Flint  Cleansing  Co. 

28 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

28 

Fox  Bakery  Co. 

28 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

28 

A.  F.  Carpenter 

28 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

29 

JAMES  FENNER 
ARTHUR  GESWELL 
WILLIAM  T.  DUNBAR 
JOHN  B.  FAY 
GUILFORD  SAUNDERS 
WILLIAM  WALLACE 
JOHN  HOWARD 
TIMOTHY  J.  O'CONNOR 
JAMES    SPIKES 
JOHN  L.  SULLIVAN 
CHESTER  H.  MADDOX 
MICHAEL  McGREAVEY 
EDWARD  J.  GOULD 
WILLIAM  F.  MEESE 
ROBERT  K.  PATTERSON 
EDWARD  J.  TEW 
CHARLES  WHITE 
JOHN  F.  CONNORS 


22 


2 

O 

h  c 

».l 
SI 

S  CO 

2n 
^  3 

5? 

^1 

<  o 
U  to 

h  S 
n2 


VETERAN  DRIVER  CLASS— Continued 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


Years  of 
Service 


PATRICK  DONAHUE 
M.  J.  CURRAN 
THOMAS  H.  McMANUS 
ANDREW  BLAKE 
CHRISTIAN  LORENSON 
PATRICK  A.  OUINN 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
JOHN  BREWER 
LOUIS  BRIER 


C.  F.  Eddy  Co.  30 

John  T.  Scully  Co.  31 

Paine  Furniture  Co.  34 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  35 

Jenness  &  Co.  35 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co.  35 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  36 

B.  J.  Healey  39 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  40 


The  Veteran  Driver's  Prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P,  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropohtan  Coal  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years  ;  in  1905,  by  Thomas  Haley,  an 
employee  of  the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.,  with  a  record  of  40  years  ;  and  a  medal  w^as 
also  given  to  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation  for  38  years. 
In  1906  the  medal  was  won  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.  T.  &c  A.  G.  Van 
Nostrand  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years  ;  in  1907  by  John  Francis  Kelley,  employed 
by  R.  O.  Brigham  for  42  years;  in  1908  by  Thomas  Colbert,  employed  by  Henry  Craft's 
Sons,  and  by  James  Holland,  employed  by  P.  O'Riorden  Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a 
medal,  having  each  served  for  a  term  of  43  years.  A  special  silver  medal  was  also  awarded 
to  John  Green  for  his  service  of  49  years  with  the  City  of  Boston.  In  1909  this  prize  was 
won  by  John  M.  Lee,  of  the  Boston  Ice  Co.,  with  a  record  of  52  years'  service.  In  1910 
the  prize  went  to  Henry  Knox,  who  had  driven  37  years  for  the  George  McQuesten  Lum- 
ber Co.  In  1911  and  in  1912  the  medal  was  won  by  Louis  Brier,  driver  for  Jordan  Marsh 
Company,  with  a  term  of  service  of  38  years  and  39  years  respectively. 

Solon  J.  Richardson  has  a  record  of  39  years'  employment  by  the  City  Laundry  Com- 
pany, and  receives  a  special  silver  medal. 


23 


Ceylon  Tea 


Pure 


Rich 


t     LB. 

CANISTERS 

60  CENTS 

1-2  LB. 

CANISTERS 
35   CENTS 


Fragrant 


Packed  in  Parchment-lined  One-pound  and  Half-pound  Canisters 


WE  INVITE  COMPARISON   WITH   OTHER 
TEAS  OF  THE  SAME  OR  HIGHER   PRICE 


S.  S.  PIERCE  CO. 


TREMONT  AND  BEACON  STREETS 
COPLEY  SQUARE  .         .         .         . 

COOLIDGE  CORNER 


BOSTON 

BOSTON 

BROOKLINE 


CLASSES 


CLASS  1— FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  may  award  one  first  and  three  second  prizes  in  this  class  if  they  are 
deserved. 

To  each  driver  winning  a  prize  in  this  class  Dr.  Daniel  P.  Keogh,  Veterinary  Surgeon 
of  the  Fire  Department,  offers  a  prize  of  $2.50  in  gold. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

No.  of 

Horses 

1            City  of  Boston 
(Chemical  8) 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

John  M.  Devine 

Frank 
Major 

2 

2            City  of  Boston 
(Engine  25) 

Thomas  F.  Wren 

Nick 
Spike 

2 

3            City  of  Boston 
(Engine  39) 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

John  J.  Ryan 

Tom 
Dick 
Harry 

3 

4           City  of  Boston 
(Ladder  3) 

Jeremiah  J;  Cronin 

BiUie. 
Hughie 
Dynamite 
Bay 

3 

CLASS  2— POLICE  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Five  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


)  City  of  Melrose 

Chief  George  E.  Kerr  Allston  H.  Pineo 

CLASS  3— U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Five  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


William  George 


William  (ieorge 


25 


A\^^iv^(i  X^aX 


MAtlt   \U  €.HC\.i\r^O 


has  for  many  years  been  reg- 
ularly fed  to  a  majority  of  the 

PRIZE   WINNING    HORSES 

of 

GREAT  BRITAIN  and  CONTINENTAL  EUROPE 

because  it  has  been  demonstrated  that 
its   regular  use   makes   these  animals 

EAT  BETTER 

LOOK  BETTER 

WORK  BETTER 

I  'WO  years'  experience  with  American  Driving 
and   Work-Horses    proves   that   no   one  who 
desires  to  secure  the  best  possible  results  from  his 
horses  can  afford  not  to  use  it. 

We  shall  be  glad  to  arrange  for  any  owner 
or  feeder  to  test  its  merits  in  his  own  stable. 


Send  postal  for  full  information 


THE  MOLASSINE  COMPANY 

BOARD  OF  TRADE  BUILDING,  BOSTON 

26 


CITY  OF  BOSTON 
CLASS  4     PARK  DEPARTMENT 

The   Judges   may   award   such    ribhons,    First,    Second    or  Third,  as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

7               P 

irk  I)ri:)artinent 

*James  J.  O'Brien 

1 

8 

(Sixth  Year  ir 

Parade) 

^Patrick  J.  Daley 

2 

9 

John  Corlin 

1 

10 

Francis  Corrigan 

1 

11 

Patrick  Carey 

1 

12 

John  F.  Coakley 

1 

13 

Joseph  Doyle 

1 

14 

James  T.  Donely 

1 

15 

Michael  Murray 

2 

16 

*Michael  Connors 

2 

17 

Thomas  Dolan 

2 

CITY  OF  BOSTON,  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT 
CLASS  5     OLD  HORSES 

In  this  class  the  horses  will  be  judged  in   competition,   and   the  Judges  may  award   a 
First,  Second  and  Third  ribbon  and  "  Highly  Commended  "  ribbons. 

The  Association  gives  Two  Dollars  to  each  driver  winning  a  ribbon. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

18 

OWNER'S  NAME 

San.  Div.,  \o.  Grove  St. 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

*Samuel  J.  Blair 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  sof 
Service 

Sam 

20 

14 

19 

Water  Div.,  Albany  St. 

(Eleventh  Year  in  Parade)' 

Joseph  Reed 

No.  39 

20 

14 

20 

Pav.  Div.,  Charlestown 

Thomas  Watts 

No.  7 

28 

19 

21 

Sewer  Diw,  Albany  Si. 

James  McDonoutih 

Bob 

24 

19 

22 

Pav.  Div.,  East  Boston 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

nVilliam  C.allasher 

Billy 

25 

19 

27 


*Entiilc<l  to  Driver's  Badge 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 


Our  Laundry  Work 


COLLECTIONS    MADE 

In  Roslindale,  Dorchester,  South  Boston,  Brookline 
Nantasket,  Back  Bay  and  City 


TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  283 


CITY  LAUNDRY  CO. 

82  to  98  West  Lenox  Street 


28 


CITY  OF  BOSTON,  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT 
CLASS  6     PAVING  DIVISION 

The  Judges  may  award  in  the  following  classes  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third, 
as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

I  ■ 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

23 

Paving  Division 

Timothy  Callal:an 

24 

" 

John  Doherty 

25 

" 

Thomas  Egan 

26 

" 

Dennis  Desmond 

27 

" 

Michael  Rooney 

28 

" 

Patrick  Murray 

2 

29 

"              " 

James  Shea 

2 

CLASS  7— STREET  CLEANING  SERVICE 


In  this  Class  Fire  Commissioner  Charles  H.  Cole  presents  a  prize  of  Two  Dollars 
to  each  driver  winning  a  ribbon,  in  memory  of  the  late  Superintendent  of  Streets,  Benjamin 
W.  Wells. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

30 

Street  Cleaning  Service 

William  Hartnett 

1 

31 

Michael  Kennedy 

1 

32 

Charles  Pike 

1 

33 

John  Killigrew 

2 

34 

John  Kirby 

2 

35 

Stephen  Sawyer 

2 

29 


Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

20  Exchange  Place,  Boston 


Telephone,  Main  4640 


30 


CLASS  8— STREET  WATERING  AND  OILING  SERVICE 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S 

NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

36 

Sired  Watering  and  Oiling  Service 
Highland  Street 

*P 

a  trick  Cn 

nin 

1 

37 

Street  Watering  and  Oiling  Ser\'ice 
Highland  Street 

J 

imes  Shea 

2 

CLASS  9— WATER  DEPARTMENT 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

38       Water  Dept.,    Albany  Street 

David  Leo 

39 

Michael  Mulkern 

40 

Michael  Ronan 

41 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Matt.  I.  Nolan 

42 

Jere  Sullivan 

43 

Thos.  McAulifife 

44 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

Michael  Burke 

2 

31 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


T70R  nine   consecutive    years  we    have   made  all   the  Gold,   Silver,  and    Bronze 


r 


Medals,    Brass     Shields,    Special    Prizes    and    Prize    Ribbon    Rosettes    for    the 


BOSTON  WORK=HORSE  PARADE  ASSOCIATION. 


We  make  a  specialty  of  Superior  Prize   Ribbon  Rosettes,  Gold,  Silver,  and 
Bronze  Medals,  Athletic  Medals,  Club  and  Class  Pins,  Banners,  Flags,  etc. 

WRITE    FOR    CATALOGUES    OR    ESTIMATES 

BOSTON    BADGE    CO. 

629  Old  South  Building  294  Washington  St.,  Boston 


32 


CLASS  10— SEWER  SERVICE 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

45 

Sewer  Service,  Albany  Street 

John  F.  Breen 

1    ' 

46 

Thomas  F.  Casey 

47 

.. 

James  F.  Fagan 

48 

Timothy  Kennedy 

49 

James  McDonough 

50 

.. 

Jeremiah  Sheehan 

51 

Child  Street 

John  Barrett 

52 

John  Graham 

CLASS  11— SANITARY  SERVICE,  ALBANY  STREET 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

1 

53 

San.  Service,  Albany  Street 

Jos.  Callahan 

1 

54 

\Vm.  Greeney 

55 

James  Maloney 

5(3 

.. 

James  McCarty 

57 

John  H.  O'Brien 

58 

Chas.  Sheehan 

59 

" 

John  Sweeney 

2 

33 


1^ 


C.  F.  Eddy 
Company 

Coal 
Dealers 


St  Jl  JH 


To  Gladden 
the  Heart 

of  a  girl  who  deserves  the  best 
there  is,  be  sure  and  get  a  pack- 
age of  LOWNEY'S  Crest 
Chocolates.  They  make  an 
exquisite  gift  fit  for  a  princess. 
^  The  box  itself,  the  packing 
in  lace  paper,  tin  foil  and  paper 
cups,  and  the  convenient  trays, 
are  artistic  and  appetizing. 
^  The  bonbons  are  coated 
with  an  expensive  chocolate 
that  has  never  been  equalled 
for  quality.  The  centers  are 
mostly  surprises,  novelties  and 
exquisitely  delicious  harmonies 
of  flavor.  ^  We  recommend 
LOWNEY'S  Crest  Choco- 
lates at  a  dollar  a  pound  as 
the  most  refined,  delicious 
bonbons  that  it  is  possible 
to  make  or  buy. 

THE 

WALTER  M.  LOWNEY 
COMPANY 

BOSTON 


West  Newton,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Newton  West  91 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

A.  E.  BLISS 

GENERAL  SUPERINTENDENT 

MALDEN   ELECTRIC  CO. 

MALDEN  AND  MELROSE 
GAS  LIGHT  CO. 


34 


CLASS  12-SANITARY  SERVICE,  NORTH  GROVE  STREET 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


60 

San.  Service,  No.  Grove  Street 

*William  Moran                                    1 

61 

Fourt 

h  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  L.  Sullivan,  Vet.  Driver        1 

62 

"                 "                 "              "                 " 

*John  Tague                                           1 

63 

"              " 

*John  HoUoran                                      1 

64 

. 

*Michael  F.  McGrath                         1 

65 

u 

*Jerr\'  Mahoney                                    1 

CLASS   13— DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  may  award    such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem   to.  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


66       Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


68 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

69 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


71 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade  i 

72 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


M.  J.  Shea 
*Timothy  J. O'Connor,  Vet.  Driver 
*Albert  Williams 
*John  J.  Daly 
*Timothy  J.  O'Connor,  Jr. 
*Andre\v  J.  Dooly 

Bartholomew  Fitzgerald 


35 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


=Roessle  Brewery 

PREMIUM  LAGER  BEER 

IN  WOOD   OR   BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  Highest  Type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Quality 
Age,  Substance,  Purity  and  Aroma,   and    is    Absolute    Perfection 


ESTABLISHED  1846 


OFFICE,    BREWERY  AND    BOTTLING    DEPARTMENT 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE      *        »       BOSTON,  MASS. 


Compliments; 

of 
3  jFrienb 


oO 


CLASS  14— MILK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

73 

Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

John  Dronski 

1 

74 

(This  Ma 

re  is  16  years  old; 

Timothy  O'Connell 

1 

75 

"              "                   "           " 

W.  I.  Coffin 

1 

76 

F.  E.  Boyd 

*Theophile  A.  Belliveau 

1 

77 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

Walter  S.  Hicks 

2 

78 

" 

William  Martin 

2 

79 

" 

Albert  L.  Andrews 

2 

80 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*John  D.  Comeau 

2 

81 

"              "                 " 

Manton  Greenleaf 

2 

82 

" 

James  Healey 

2 

83 

" 

Ernest  Hollis 

2 

84 

.. 

H.  A.  Stone 

2 

85 

(Seventh 

Year  in  Parade  for  Nigh  Horse) 

Elmer  Peterson 

2 

86 

(Eighth 

Year  in  Parade  for  Nigh  Horse) 

Morris  Millett 

2 

87 

John  J.  Corkery 

*  James  J.  Corkery 

88 

"     " 

John  J.  Corkery 

1      89 

"      " 

*Patrick  Murphy 

90 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

David  Shay 

91 

" 

Carl  Thomes 

92 

"       " 

Albert  Ryder 

93 

William  Armstrong 

94 

•• 

William  Lord 

95 

"       " 

William  McGraw 

2 

96    ■ 

.. 

*Samuel  McKeeman 

2 

97 

Benj.  Plumer 

2 

37 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


NECCO  WAFERS 


The    big    roll, — made    in    eight    flavors,    also    assorted 
Hub  V/aiers  are  similar,  but  with  a  transparent  wrapper 


ON  SALE  EVERYWHERE 


MADE   BY 

New  England  Confectionery  Company 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


Importers  of  and  Whole- 
sale Dealers  in 
WJNES  and  LIQUORS 


Bottlers  of 

LAGER  BEER 

ALE  and  PORTER 


PRINTERS 
ENGRAVERS 


BLANK  BOOK 
MANUFACTURERS 


Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

467  and  469  East  Eighth  Street 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


Proprietors  'JOHN  S.  LEICHT 
rroprieiors  ^  j^^j^j^y  j    SCHREINER 

Telephone,  South  Boston  544 


WINDOW  SHADES 

MADE  TO  ORDER 

THE  HOYT  COniPflNY 

443  Broadway,  South  Boston 

1246  Dorchester  Avenue,  Dorchester 

ESTIMATES  FURNISHED 


HILL,  SMITH  Cj  CO. 

STATIONERS 

LOOSE  LEAF  SPECIALISTS 

8  MILK  STREET,  BOSTON 

Telephone,  Main  1590  Private  Branch  Exchange 

Compliments  of 

John  T.  Kilduff 

TRUCKMAN 

72  Northampton  Street 
BOSTON 


38 


MILK— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


98  Morris  (;()1(1  man 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

99  Martin  J.  Hickey 

100  Johnson's  Creamery  Co. 

101  McDonald-Weber  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

102  "  "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade  for  White  Horse) 

103  M.  Rubin  &  Sons 


104     Turner  Centre  Dairying  Assn. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


105 
106 

107 

108 

(Third  Year  in  Parad  e) 

109 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

110  J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 

111  "  "         "         "     " 

(This  Horse  has  won  Five  First  Prizes) 

112  D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

113  " 

114  " 

( Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

115  " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

116  " 

117  " 

(Nigh  Horse  Sixth  Year  in 


Geo.  L.  Goldman 

Adam  Gradecki 

Joseph  DeEll 

A.  W^  Huey 
*Joseph  I.  Pingree 

Samuel  Rubin 

*John  C.  Martin 

Charles  E.  Wilson 
James  P.  Gentner 

*Daniel  Desmond 

*James  H.  Martin 

*John  Carroll 

Henry  Hubert 

*Robert  Hezlett 

John  Greeley 

Waldo  F.  Haskell 

Henry  L.  Fallon 

*Charles  D.  Fletcher 

*Waldo  H.  Wellington 


'       "  *George  H.  Brown 

Parade  and  off  Horse  Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

"Clayton  E.  Everton 


118       " 

(Nigh  Horse  Ninth  Year  in  Parade  and  off  Horse  Third  Year  in  Parade) 


39 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


COLEMAN  BROTHERS 
General   Contractors 


BOSTON 


Sole  Partner  JOHN    F.   COLEMAN 


RED  ACRE  FARM 


The  Home  for  Horses 


IP«f    STOW 

Twenty-five  miles  from  Boston 
Telephone.  West  Acton  8  RailrOad  StatJOH  Httd  PoSt  OfflCC,  South  ActOfl 


Any  horse  may  be  sent  to   the  Farm  at  any  time,  with  or 
without  notice. 

Apply  for  information  at  the  office  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association,  15  Beacon  Street,  Room  27. 


CLASS  15~BAKERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

119 

Salvatore  Andolino 

Frank  Andolino 

120 

Drake  Bros.  Co. 

John  J.  Hill 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

121 

"                 "           " 

Eddie  A.  Nevins 

122 

.,           ,< 

Sidney  B.  Lohmas 

123 

William  S.  McFetridge 

124 

..           .. 

Albert  H.  Robinson 

125 

"           " 

Arthur  B.  Crouse 

126 

..           w 

Addison  T.  Ridlon 

127 

Ferguson  Bakery 
General  Baking  Co. 

Walter  Beach 

128 

" 

*  Joseph  Gormley 

129 

Frank  F"eehan 

130 

>. 

Harvey  Thompson 

131 

•• 

Samuel  Fletcher 

132 

*James  Cronk 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

133 

James  Bailey 

2 

134 

.. 

Richard  Leonard 

2 

135 

Thomas  Hunt 

2 

136 

.. 

James  Powers 

2 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


41 


WE   make   a   specialty   of    handling    nothing    but   NUMBER 
ONE    HORSES    in    all    classes    right    off    the    farms    of 
Indiana   bought   by  George   McKinney. 

Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday,  at  I  P.M. 


McKINNEY  BROTHERS  &  CO. 

Brighton  Horse  Exchange  and  Sale  Stables 

233  Friend  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Haymarket  848 


Compliments   of 


THE 

ATLANTIC 

WORKS 


ELDRIDGE 
BAKER  CO. 

WHOLESALE 

GROCERS 

213-215   State   St.,   Boston 


42 


BAKERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


137      Fox  Bakery 

Cxcneral  Baking  Cc 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

138 
139 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

140 
141 
142 
143 
144 
145 
146 

147  O.  B.  Gilman 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

148  "     "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

149  "     "       " 

150  "     "       " 

151  Peter  Pomes 

152  The  Pratt  Bread  Co. 

153  "  "  "  " 

154  "  "  "  " 

155  "  "  "  " 

156  "  "  "  " 

157  W'ickham  &  Roe 

158  "         "       " 

159  "         "       " 

160  "         "       " 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.o 
Horses 


Robert  K.  Patterson,  Vet.  Driver 

Robert  Pratt 
Arthur  W.  Gillespie 

T.  W.  Torrey 
Albert  Bradeen 
John  L.  Sullivan 
W.  E.  Younker 
Fred  Henbert 
Arthur  Bramble 
Patrick  Wood 
*Henry  McGowan 

Robert  Eaves 

Walter  Rierdon 
*Emil  L.  Richwagen 
R.  Bulguet 
John  A.  Finn 
John  F.  O'Niel 
William  H.  Donahue 
Peter  Mclnnis 
John  Olliff 
William  T.  Messer 
Norman  W.  Sias 
Irving  C.  Burpee 
Patrick  H.  Schragc 


*Entitlecl  to  Driver's  Badge 


43 


BLINN,  MORRILL  &  COMPANY 


ZDruckmen 


6  CHATHAM   ROW 

AND 

13  FRANKLIN  STREET 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


J.  C.TALBOT 

FANCY  AND   STAPLE 

(Btoceries 


1 157  Washin§:ton  St.,  Dorchester 

Branch  Store: 

Associates  Building 

MILTON  ESTABLISHED  1815 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

FELLS  ICE 
COMPANY 


CITY  FUEL  CO. 

. .  COAL . . 

WHARVES: 

East  Boston,    Albany  Street 
Milton,  Roslindale 

General  Office,  John  Hancock  Building 

TELEPHONE,  FORT  HILL  4470 


ESTABLISHED  1841 

W.  P.  STONE  &  COmPflNY 

Manufacturers  of 

}Vagons,   Caravans  and  Sleds 

Carriage  Painting 

REPAIRING  IN   ALL  BRANCHES 

175  and  179  West  First  Street 
SOUTH   BOSTON 


44 


CLASS  16— LAUNDRY 

The  Judges  may  award  such   ribbons,   First,   Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


161 

162 
163 
164 
165 
166 
167 
168 
169 
170 
171 
172 


E.  L.  Armand 
Beacon  Laundrv  Co. 


City 


Laundry  Co. 


173 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

174 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

175 
(Third  Year  in  Parade)" 

176 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 
177 

178 
(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

179 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

180 
(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

181 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Edward  L.  Armand 
Joseph  McClellan 
Edward  Stearns 
Elma  Eichorn 
Alex.  McMichael 
Anthony  H.  Oakes 
Edward  H.  Newton 
John  Pasalacque 
Daniel  Warren 
Thomas  F.  Reardon 
Charles  Schoffield 
Solon  J.  Richardson 
Henry  K.  Barnard 

A.  C.  Burr 

^T.  J.  Cronin 

George  W.  Ring 

Robert  Moore 
nVilHam  W.  Paterson 

James  P.  O'Brien 
J.  E.  Holderricd 
George  Reveau 


45 


*  Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


E.  J.  BABCOCK 

e»al  and  Cbarc«al 

47    SHERWOOD    STREET,    ROXBURY 

TELEPHONE,     ROXBURY    369 


TK.r,.    ROXBURV    471  TKI..    CHAHLK.STOW 

GREENE   BROS.  &   CO. 

Carriage   and    Wagon   Manufacturers 
Also  Builders  of  Truck  Bodies  and  Wheels 

ALL  KINDS  OF  REPAIRING  NEATLY   DONE 

FIRST  CLASS  WORK  SATISFACTION  GUARANTEED 

WAGONS  CALLED  FOR  AND  DELIVERED 

Junction  of  Massachusetts  Avenue  and  Southampton  Street 

BRANCH   REPAIR  SHOP 

404  to  411  RUTHERFORD  AVENUE,  CHARLESTOWN 


DEERFOOT  FARMS,  T^UT^^o'^-^-;^. 

Boston  Store  New  York  Store 

9  BOSWORTH  STREET  J72  CHAMBERS  STREET 

"DEERFOOT" 

SAUSAGE  SALT  PORK     MILK 

SAUSAGE  MEAT  BACON  CREAM 

FRESH  PORK  LARD  BUTTER 

EGGS  BUTTERMILK 

TELEPHONES  j^-jHni  4467 


LAUNDRY-  Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


182 

183 
184 
185 
186 


Dalton  Hand  LauiKlr\- 

William  Doyle 

Empire  Coat  &  Linen  Sup.  Co. 

E.  E.  Hannaford 


(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

187  Arthur  J.  Hickey 

188  Marine  Towel  Supply  C( 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


189 

190 

(Third 

191 
192 
193 
194 
195 
196 
197 
198 
199 
200 
201 
202 
203 
204 
205 
206 


N.  E.  Supply  Co. 

Year  in  Parade) 

Pilg^rini  Laundry  Co. 


Union  Laundr\'  Co. 


While  &  Clean  Hygienic  Ldr>  . 
The  White  Cross  Laundr\-  Co. 


William  (i.  Kiniry 
William  Do>le 
W. Snow 

Eugene  A.  Sullivan 
Harry  S.  Johnson 

John  Bronkhorst 
*Patrick  J.  Hennesse\- 

George  E.  Phillips 
*John  E.  Murphy 

Steve  S.  Massie 
George  H.  Which er 
Walter  W.  Holmes 
Erving  C.  Tukesbury 
Edward  H.  Fairfield 
George  H.  Booth 
Joseph  P.  Curry 
W'illard  W.  Murray 
Daniel  J.  Cochran 
James  P.  Crilley 
John  McKenna 
Warren  A.  Hardy 
Edward  C.  Robinson 
Wilfred  Eldridge  Filteau 
John  P.  (\)nnors 
James  A.  King 


47 


''Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


L.  H.  Brockway 

SALE   STABLE 

Fine  Driving  Horses  and  Matched  Pairs 
Trotters  and  Pacers  a  Specialty  ,'.  .'. 
Horses  Bought  and  Sold  on  Commission 


GOOD  SUPPLY  OF  DRAFT  AND  BUSINESS  HORSES 
ALWAYS  ON  HAND 

Satisfaction  Guaranteed.     All  Horses  Warranted  as  Represented,  but  not  against  Sickness 


153  Portland  Street,  Boston 

TELEPHONE,  HAYMARKET  1380 


FILIPPO  BRUNO  6  CO. 

Bottlers 

' 

TELEPHONE,  RICHMOND  1319 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

298-300  NORTH  ST.  and  50  FLEET  ST. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

William  Leavens  &  Co* 

Established  1865                              Telephone,  Tremont  354 

32  CANAL  STREET,  BOSTON 

J.  M.  DOUGLASS 

EXPRESS 

Furniture    and    Piano    Moving,       Pack 

Furniture    for  Shipment.     Store 

Furniture.     Clean  and  Relay 

Carpets 

• 

134  \VEST  CANTON  ST..  BOSTON 

Down  Town  Office,  13  Devonshire  St. 

48 


CLASS  17— DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such    ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as   they  deem   to    be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.o 
Horses 


207  Walter  W.  Blanchard 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

208  John  J.  Blute 

209  A.  S.  Caplan 

210  H.  &  L.  Chase 

211  Croft  &  Hall 

212  Israel  Dane 

213  John  Donnelly  &  Sons 

214  Dorchester  Pottery  Works 
215 

216  Duffy  Bros. 

217  Eastern  Cigar  Co. 

j          (Third  Year  in  Parade) 

218  E.  R.  Flint  Cleansing  Co. 

219  D.  J.  Furden 

220  Alexandet;  Gariepy 

221  ,    "  " 
222"  William  B.  Hammond 

223  George  T.  Hoyt  Awning  Co. 

224  The  Kellv  Peanut  Co. 


225 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

226 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


227 


M.  A.  Langenthal 


Walter  W.  Blanchard 

John  J.  Blute 

Hyman  Caplan 

Fred  J.  Reid 

Charles  Bowsher 

Samuel  I.  Miller 
*John  E.  Lyons 

Henry  H.  Gross 

William  Gross 

Edward  G.  Duffy 

Allen  I.  Webb 

Edward  J.  Gould,  Vet.  Driver 

D.  J.  Furden 
*J.  W.  Leidenger 

James  E.  Lynch 

William  Maloy 
*Charles  H.  Pidgeon 

Chester  A.  McCloskey 
*Louis  Fiorentino 
*  Richard  Powell 

M.  A.  Langenthal 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


tf- 


^\ 


YOU  ARE  INVITED  TO 
VISIT  OUR  LAUNDRY 


OUR  doors  are  always  open  to  the  public  for  the  inspec- 
tion of  our  plant  and  methods.  If  you  have  never 
been  inside  a  modern  laundry,  a  few  moments  of  your 
spare  time  spent  with  us  will  be  interesting  to  you     .     .     . 


Taylor  Bros.  Laundry 

10-16  Davenport  Avenue 

UPHAM'S  CORNER  -  -  -  DORCHESTER 


^ 


r^ 


L.  D.  JOHNSON                    'Phone,  Tremont  71 

^bornbike  Stables 

BOARDING   AND   BAITING 

85-95  West  Dedham  St. 
BOSTON.  MASS. 

Bain   Brothers  Co. 

Wholesale 
GROCERS 

240  MILK  STREET,  BOSTON 

Tel.,  Richmond  2575                          I-    L-   SMITH,   Mgr. 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Association 

MANUFACTURERS  OF 

FINE  CREAMERY  BUTTER 

AND  DEALERS  IN 

SWEET  CREAM 

Boston  Branch: 

33  FULTON  ST.,  Cor.  CROSS 

MALDEN  COAL 
COMPANY 

154  PLEASANT  STREET 

Telephones,  494  and  495 

50 


DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS  -  Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


228 


John  Leech 


229  Alphonse  A.  LeMay 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

230  A.  Lord  &  Co.,  Inc. 

231  John  J.  Lyons 

232  R.  Marston  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

233  "       " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

234  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

235  M.  E.  Moore 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

236  *      W.  H.  H.  Parcher 

237  F.  W.  Pavitt 

238  Plakias  Lunch  Co. 

239  Estate  of  W.  K.  Porter 

240  Rees  &  Rees 

241  A.  P.  Rockwood 

242  F.  Rotondx) 

243  Moses  H.  Simon 

244  I.  Smith 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


245 


Michael  Smith 


246  Stabile  &  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

247  E.  Teel  &  Co. 

248  Walton  Lunch  Co. 

249  Joseph  A.  Wickes 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


John  Leech 

Alphonse  A.  LeMay 

William  T.  Evans 

William  P.  Luddy 
*William  Robson 
*Raymond  E.  Valiquet 
*Galen  F.  Spinney 
*Michael  Meany 

Andrew  Yunitz 

F.  W.  Pavitt 

Steven  S.  Stauropulos 

Louis  Levy 

Richard  Ronagon 
*Martin  J.  Culliton 

John  Murray 

Moses  H.  Simon 
*Harry  Smith 

Michael  Smith 
*Gabriel  Romano 
*P.  J.  Morrissey 

Charles  H.  Murphy 
*George  Pennington 


51 


*Entitlecl  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Mercantile  Heart  of  New  England 

The  Store  of  Greatest  Stocks 
The  Store  of  Best  Service 

The  Store  of  Correct  Styles 

The  Store  of  Strongest  Values 

We  guarantee  the  price  of  everything  we  sell  to  be  as  low  as,  or 
lower  than,  the  same  article  can  be    bought  in  New  England 

Jordan  Marsh  Company 

Two  Great  Buildings—  1 ,100,000  sq.ft.   of  Floor  Space 


President, GEO.  H.  BUCK        Treasurer,  DAVID  C.  BUCK 

Eastern  Storag'e  Co. 

EVERETT  AVE.   AND  MAPLE  ST. 

CHELSEA 

Storage    for    all    kinds    of   Merchandise   and 
Household  Goods. 

Connected  by  spur-track  with  B.  &  M.  R.R. 

Shipments  made  direct  by  rail  or  by  our  own 
teams. 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

Hotel  Bellevue 

Rescue  Mission  Wood 
and  Coal  Yard,  Inc, 

34  CHESTNUT  STREET 
SOMERVILLE,  MASS. 

TELEPHONE,  SOMERVILLE  2460 

F.J.  McCarthy  &  Co. 

Grocers  and  Importers 

FOREIGN  AND  DOMESTIC  LIQUORS 

FOR    FAMILY  AND  MEDICINAL  USE 

Bottlers  of  Lager  Beer  and  all  Kinds  of  Ales  and  Porters 

225  Havre  St.,  East  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  East  Boston  30 

52 


CLASS  18DEL1VERIES,  DEPARTMENT  STORES 

The  Judges  may  award   such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem    to    be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

■ 

No.  of 
Horses 

250          Levin's  Deparlmenl  Sw.re 

David  C;iick 

251          Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

*Frank  McGovern 

252                "              "       " 

Lawrence  McHale 

253                "             "       " 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

Louis  Brier,  Vet.  Driver 

254                "             "       " 

James  Jensen 

255 

John  Mahoney 

256 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Leo  Med  us 

257                "             "       " 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

*James  Gagan 

258                "             "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

John  McFarland 

259                        "                    "          " 
(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  Lonergan 

260         Henry  Siegel  Co.. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Henry  E.  Clark 

261 

Thomas  Gorham 

262 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade)  - 

John  J.  Bouduin 

263 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

John  Garritty 

264 

Joseph  Riley 

265 

Frank  Silva 

266 

Thomas  Packey 

2 

267 

Martin  McNamara 

2 

268 

William  Burkett 

2 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


63 


OUR  MILK  SUPPLY 

COUNTRY  END  ^Our  dairies  are  regularly  visited  by  trained  inspectors  to 
secure  clean,  healthy  cows — ^well-lighted  and  ventilated  cow  stables — milk  rooms 
and  supplies  of  ice  for  the  cooling  of  milk.  ^Our  contract  with  each  producer 
states  that  in  case  of  the  outbreak  of  any  infectious  disease  at  the  farm,  shipment 
of  milk  shall  be  stopped. 

CITY  END  ^Our  milk  is  transported  to  the  city  in  refrigerator  cars  in  express 
trains  and  is  received  in  a  modern  plant  with  every  facility  for  the  sanitary  handl- 
mg  of  milk,  viz., — machinery  for  the  cleansing  of  cans  and  bottles  by  caustic  alka- 
lies and  steam — filling  and  capping  of  bottles  by  automatic  apparatus  eliminating 
handling  by  men — lavatories  and  shower  baths  for  employees — steam  laundry  for  the 
cleansing  and  sterilizing  of  employees'  suits — a  chemical  laboratory  to  guard  the  rich- 
ness of  our  milk — a  bacteriological  laboratory  to  guard  the  cleanliness  of  our  milk. 
PASTEURIZATION  ^We  do  not  stop  with  this,  but  finally  subject  our 
milk  to  Pasteurization  in  recently  perfected  apparatus  which  holds  the  milk  for 
twenty  minutes  at  a  temperature  of  1 45  degrees  Fahrenheit.  Pasteurization  under 
these  scientific  conditions  destroys  any  germs  of  disease  which  may  have  reached 
milk  in  spite  of  the  above  described  system  of  precaution  and,  according  to  our 
best  investigators,  does  not  injure  the  digestibility  of  milk.  ^The  system  above 
described  gives  our  supply  the  highest  possible  degree  of  security.  ^Our  plant 
and  methods  of  handling  milk  are  open  at  all  times  for  your  inspection. 

Tel..  Charlestown  1100  D.   WHITING     &     SONS 


Locke  Coal  €o« 


MALDEN  and  MEDFORD 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

W.  S.  Ouimby  Co. 

COFFEE  AND  TEA 
MERCHANTS 

BOSTON  CHICAGO 


ESTABLISHED  1872 

DOHERTY  e  DALY 

BOTTLERS  OF 

Mineral  Waters,  Tonies,  Ete. 

SODA  TANKS  A  SPECIALTY 
309  and  31 1  Albany  St.,  Boston 

Telephone,  Tremont  1174-M 

COMPLIMENTS  OF 

J.  H.  Richardson 

Cosmopolitan  Boarding 
and  Baiting  Stable 

Corner  PITTS    AND    SOUTH  MARGIN  STS. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

STOCK  FARM.  ANDOVER,  MASS. 


54 


CLASS  19— FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 


The  Judges  may  award   such  ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  01 
Horses 


269 
270 
271 
272 
273 
274 


Salvatore  Andolino 
William  A.  Black  &  Co. 
Bloomberg  Bros. 

Jackson  Caldwell 
Edward  Courtnev 


275  G.  S.  Densmore 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

276  James  M.  Douglass 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

277  East  Cambridge  Furniture  Co 

278  Alger  E.  Eaton 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


279 

Morris  Freedman  Co. 

280 

S.  V.  Garland 

281 

"      " 

282 

"       "     ■    " 

283 

"      "         " 

284 

"       " 

285          "      " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

286 

Isaac  Goodman 

287  James  F.  Grad\- 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

288  James  G.  Haynes  Est. 

289  John  A.  Hedin  Co. 


Tony  Casadone 
George  R.  Spooner 
Nathan  Fisher 
Raymon  Kuskin 

*John  Hunt 
James  T.  Courtney 

*George  W.  Murray 
Perley  H.  Hamlin 
Philip  Gans 

*  William  B.  Colter 
Harry  Wentworth 
John  Cavanaugh 
Blair  Garland 

*Walter  Gallagher 
Frank  Tallent 
William  Tallent 
Gus  Tallent 
Isaac  Goodman 
James  F.  Grady 
James  F.  Brennan 
William  F.  M.ooney 


55 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Beer  That  Made  Milwaukee  Famous 

Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

GENERAL  N.  E.  AGENTS  OF  THE 

JOS.  SCHLITZ  BREWING  CO. 

Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale  Dealers,  Importers  and  Bottlers  of  High 
Grade  Goods  Only 

340-350  C  STREET  SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


t 

1 

» 

i;f)e  Eotoe  Calk 
Company 

SELF-SHARPENING 
HORSE  SHOE  CALKS 

HARTFORD,  CONNECTICUT 

Compliments  of 

Eastern  Oil  and 
Rendering  Co. 

225     Rutherford     Avenue 
CHARLESTOWN,  MASS. 

56 


FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS-Gontinued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

290 

(Third 

Cicorge  T.  Jaciucs 

Year  in  Parade) 

*  Henry  C  Rose                                       1 

291 

Valdeniar  ().  Kalberi^ 

*Archie  F.  Haggie                                 1 

292 

A.  McArllnir  Co. 

Arthur  P.  McKenna                           1 

293 

(Third 

Paine  Furniture  Co. 

Year  in  Parade) 

William  Williamson                              1 

294 

"                    "              " 

James  Smith                                         1 

295 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

Waldo  Winch                                        1 

296 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Thos.  H.  McManus,  Vet.  Driver     2 

297 

"                    "              " 

William  Wallace,  Vet.  Driver          2 

298 

Frank  Rotando 

Frank  Chula                                         1 

299 

" 

Frank  Rotando                                    1 

300 

" 

Michael  Stacey                                   1 

301 

Antonio  Sasso 

Antonio  Sasso                                       1 

302 

S.  Sriberg 

Abe  Dasheff                                          1 

303 

Suffolk  Furniture  Co. 

John  M.  Williamson                           1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


67 


The  Stetson  Goal  Go. 


WHARF  AND  MAIN  OFFICE 


496  First  street,  South  Boston 


JOHN  A.  STETSON    ^ 
ROBERT  D.  HALL 


President  and  General  Manager 
^        s»        ^        Treasurer 


E.  B.  MULDOWN  J.  B.  O'BRIEN 

THE  HUB  SHOEING  FORGE 

241   STATE   STREET 

(Near  Atlantic  Avenue) 

BOSTON,   MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 
PARTICULAR  ATTENTION  PAID  NEVER-SLIP  SHOEING 


Frank  m.  BaDcocK 

TEAMSTER 

258  WASHINGTON   ST.,  BOSTON 

Telephone,  Fort  Hill  2940 


Telephone,  Charlestown  766-M 

Bunker  Hill  Bottling  Co. 

MANUFACTURERS  OF 

TONICS 

BOTTLES  BELFAST  GINGER  ALE 

4,  6,  and  8  CHAMBERS  ST. 
CHARLESTOWN  -  MASS. 


fl.  J.  B0RTLETT 

Established    1840 
Commission  Merchant  and  Dealer  in 

Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs  and  Poultry 

7  and  8  No.  Market  St.  and  7  Clinton  St. 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


BEST  GRADES  A  SPECIALTY 


Tel.  Connection 


58 


CLASS  20— PROVISIONS 

LIGHT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award   such  ribbons,   First,    Second    or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
;d. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


304  Salvatore  AndoHno 

305 

306  Benson  Brotiiers 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

307  J.  D.  Brennan 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

308  Brighton  Public  Market 
309 
310 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

311  Joseph  C.  Dolan 

(Third  Year  !n  Parade) 

312  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

313  James  Gallahue 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

314  William  J.  Keefe 

315  William  Krauss 

316  Arthur  M.  Lane 

317  William  M.  Moore 

318  W.  A.  Ray 

319  E.  A.  Rich  Co. 

320  Frank  Rotando 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

321  Rowes  Wharf  Provision  Co. 

322  Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

323 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

324  Shawmut  Grocery  &  Prow  Co, 

325  Michael  J.  Shea 

326  John  L.  Sullivan 


327         J. 

(Third  Year  ii 


P.  Sweeney 

Parade) 


328  Toomey  &  Ormon 

( Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

329  Weiner  &  W  alter  ( 

330  Julius  Weinstein 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


Paul  Coombs 
A.  P.  Coombs 
*Bernard  D.  Dennison 

Cornelius  Harrington 

William  MuKaney 
Joseph  Heffernan 
nVilliam  A.  Dorr 

*Everett  E.  Hall 

Roy  E.  McKeen 

*Joseph  Gildea 

George  Carmichael 
*John  S.  Krauss 
Arthur  M.  Lane 
Arthur  F.  Schilling 
Thomas  Axon 
Arthur  O'Rourke 
P.  A.  Coombs 

Arthur  Landry 
*John  W.  Bowker 

Morris  Marder 

Walter  F.  Nickerson 
Frank  H.  Buckley 
John  L.  Sulli\an 
*Thomas  W.  Melly 

*Frank  Hoar 

''Joseph  Chanos 
Saul  Weinstein 


(Blind  Horse) 


•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Salesman 

F.   OLIVO 

369  Douglas  Avenue 

PROVIDENCE,  R.  I. 


Salesman 

S.  LEONARDI 

Banca  Lepconi,  107  Common  St. 

LAWRENCE,  MASS. 


ANT.  BICCHIERI  &  CO. 

MANUFACTURERS      OF 

MACARONI 


83  to  93  CLARK  ST. 


CAMBRIDGEPORT,  MASS. 


D.  CAMELIO  8z:  CO. 
BOTTliEt^S 

All  the  Leading  Brands  of  Ale  and  Lagers 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN  IMPORTED 
AND  DOMESTIC  WINES  AND  LIQUORS 


Thomas  Campbell 

TEflMSTEl^ 

HEAVY    TEAMING    A    SPECIALTY 

DEALER   IN 

Edgestone,    Paving    Blocks.    Foundation    Stone 
and  Crushed  Stone  for  Concrete  Work 


10  Lewis  Street  Boston 

TELEPHONE,  RICHMOND  408  5^35,^^     79     yj„g    g^^    g^g^     Cambridge 


COMPLIMENTS   OF 

Angelo  Campagna 

EXPRESS    AND 
TRANSPORTA  TION 

657  Main  Street.  Cambridgeport,  Mass. 


Telephone,  Somerville  1028-M 


Compliments 


OF 


John  W.  Whitney 


60 


GLASS  21— PROVISIONS 

HEAVY  HORSES 

The  Judges  may   award   such  ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


331 
332 
333 
334 


Antonio  Bicchieri  &  Co. 
Alfonso  Cantillo 
Caruso  Bros. 


335  W.  A.  Clement 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade,  twenty-three  years  old. 

336  Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 
337 
338 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 
339 

340 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

341 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

342 
343 

344  P.  Di  Napoli 

345  "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

346  "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

347  Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering 


Nunzio  Bicchieri 
Alfonso  Cantillo 
Peter  Caruso 
Jos.  McConologue 


Henry  Sellerrnan 

This  horse  lost  his  life  in  the  recent  fire  at  a  Roxbury  stable 


348 

(Third  Year  in  Parade' 

349 
350 


JohnO'Neil 

J.  Hallfelder 
*H.  A.  Breen 

H.  J.  Dolan 

J.  Brion 

George  Farley- 
John  Simpson 

J.J.  Walker 

John  I(jrio 

Orizio  Di  Napoli 

Carmen  Vitali 
Co.      Joseph  Gravelle 
"     ^Patrick  P.  Shaughnessy 

Edward  Harrington 
"       David  McGill 


61 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


THIRTY=  SIXTH  YEAR 


Helping  Men  to  Help  Themselves 

Boston  Industrial  Home 

Incorporated 

Corner  Davis  Street  and  Harrison  Avenue 

C^OJ%.1Lm  and  ^W^OOID 

We  deliver  anywhere,  in  any  quantity,  at  Lowest  Prices 

Evet^  ©rber  iileans  IRelief  to  the  poor 

Telephone,  Tremont  658        OLIVER  C.  ELLIOT,  Superintendent 


ORIGINAL  DIXIE   BRAND 
PEANUT    BUTTER 

AND 

SALTED   PEANUTS 

Manufactured  by 

THE  KELLY  PEANUT  COMPANY 

200  State  Street    -        -    Boston,  iviass. 


Compliments  of 

JOHN    H.    HANSON 

XEruckman 

104  High  Street  Boston 

L  fl.  WflTERHOQSE 

truckman 

155  FEDERAL  STREET        uencral    Teaniiiig 

BOSTON       *        «        MASS.  (p^ar)  1542  TREMONT  STREET 

TEL.,  FORT  HILL   3380  Telephone,  Rox.  472 


J.  L.  McCarthy 
=  COAL= 


62 


PROVISIONS  —  Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

351 

M.  Fitzpatrick  &  Son 

Patrick  Gateley 

1 

352 

"          "     " 

*RoberL  Clemens 

2 

353 

Furbush  &  Co.  Inc. 

James  H.  Coffey 

2 

354 

"     "       " 

Nicholas  L.  Clancy 

2 

355 

Joseph  Guardino 

Joseph  Guardino 

1 

356 

Handschumacher  &  Co. 

George  A.  Rogers 

1 

357 

R.  J.  Huggard 

James  F.  McQuire 

2 

358 

McKinnon  &  McKenzie  Co. 

Ernest  B.  Van  Tassel 

1 

359 

(Fifth 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 

Year  in  Parade) 

^Patrick  A.  Quinn,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

360 

Shawmut  Grocery  &  Prov.  C 

0.  Salvatore  Pergamo 

1 

361 

Snow  &  Parker 

Eben  R.  Austin 

1 

362 

Spraguc  Bros.  &  Co. 

Edward  Vial 

1 

363 

Frank  W.  Trelegan,  Sr. 

Frank  W.  Trelegan,  Jr. 

I 

364 

Rudolph  Wismer 

Rudolph  Wismer 

1 

365 

John  Wright 

John  Wright 

1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


C.  BRIQHAM  CO. 

WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN 

^ilk.  Cream   an6  :fi5uttcr 

158  Massachusetts  Avenue 

CAiVlBRIDGE,  HASS. 

TELEPHONES,  CAMBRIDGE  262  and  263 


A  Free  Clinic  for  Animals 

OF  THE   POOR 

IS  MAINTAINED  DAILY  FROM 
2  TO  3  O'CLOCK  BY  THE   NEW 

COMMONWEALTH  HOSPITAL 
FOR  ANIMALS 

24  Cummington  Street,  Back  Bay 
Telephone,  Back  Bay  2946 

Compliments  of 

National  Casket  Co. 

East  Cambridge 

Telephone,  Dorchestef  796 

DORCHESTER 

Ryan's  Transportation  Co. 

ICE  COMPANY 

EXPRESSING  TO 
ALL    PARTS   OF 

DORCHESTER 

Boston  and   Brockton 

64 


CLASS  22    CONFECTIONERS 

The   Judges   may   award   such   ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,  as   they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


Independent  Ice  Cream  Co. 

Thomas  MoHnari 
Neapolitan  Ice  Cream  Co. 


360 
367 
368 
369 
370 
371 


372   New  Engl 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

373 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


374 


375 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

376 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

377 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

379 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

380 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


381  Harry  Puransky 

382  Terminal  Ice  Cream  Co. 

383  The  Three  Millers  Co. 


384 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


id  Confectionery  ( 


Samuel  Rubin 
*W.  I.  Karp 
Thomas  Molinari 
Morris  K.  Weiner 
Max  K.  Weiner 
.   Thomas  A.  McGrath 
'o.  William  P.  O'Connor 
^Joseph  P.  McCall 
*George  H.  Marsterson 

*  Warren  E.  Davis 

*  Warren  E.  Kirk 

*J.  H.  Ferdinand  Miller 
^William  T.  Seymour 
*W.  H.  Collins 
Hartley  M.  Roe 
Harry  Puransky 
John  Menconi 
John  W.  Phipps 
Thomas  }.  Gibson 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


65 


Office  Tel..  Haymarket  221 
Stable  Tel..  Som.  2796W  Res.  Tel.,  Som.  1565 

C.   BOWEN 

MOVER  OF 

SAFES  and 

MACHINERY 

AND  GENERAL  TRUCKMAN 
SAFES  and  MACHINERY  STORED 

44  SUDBURY  ST.  and  2  BOWKER  ST. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


For  Over  44  Years 

WE  HAVE  BEEN  MAKERS  OF 

GOOD  HARNESS 

AND 

COLLARS 

327      Sets     of     our     Harness 
appeared   in  the  Last   Parade 

JAMES  FORGIE'S  SONS 

19  and  20  South  Market  St..  Albany   St.  and 
Mass.  Avenue.  BOSTON 


ESTABLISHED     1841 


E.  B.   BADGER 
(^  SONS  CO. 


c*  J«  c^ 

€opp(r$injtb$  and 
$k(t  metal  (Uorkers 

Nos.  63  to  75  PITTS  STREET 
BOSTON 


Telephone 
M.  J.  SHEA 


South  Boston  401 
M&nager 


WilsoD  Tisdale  Company 

OLD  COLONY 

STABLE 


Working   Horses  and  Wagons 
To  Let  by   the   Day   or    Week 

46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


CLASS  23— GROCERS 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second   or  Third,  as   they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVERS    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


385  Henry  P.  Andrews 

386  John  F.  Barry 

387  Maurice  Berkourtz 

388  Berry-Dodge  Co. 

389  A.  H.  Bill  Co. 

390  Calumet  Grocery  Co. 

391  Henry  Cirace 

392  T.  D.  Costa 

393  Dearborn  Grocery  Co. 

394  Empire  Grocery  Co. 

395  Nicola  Esporito 

396  Jacob  Facktoroff 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

397  C.  L.  Gilliatt 

398  M.  H.  Glynn  &  Co. 

399  "  "   "   "  " 

400  "  "   "   "  " 

401  "  "   "   "  " 

402  Habib  Bros. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

403  Martin  L.  Hall  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

404  J.  A.  Holmes  &  Co. 

405  "  "       "     " 


Arthur  L.  Nugent 
nVm.  J.  Fallon 
*Nathan  Berkourtz        (Blind  Horse) 

George  E.  Benson 

Walter  C.  Mackie 

Royal  G.  Bates 

Henry  Cirace 

Joe  Sih'a 

John  F.  Barthel 

Morris  Rathberg 

Nicola  Esporito 
*William  E.  Glennon 

Harold  L.  Frye 

Joseph  Killien 

M.  H.  Glynn 

Barney  F'ahe)- 

Denis  Fanning 

William  Sorenson 

*F.  B.  Dodge 

Frank  J.  Harrington 

Joseph  L.  Hooley 


07 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TO  SA  VE  TIME  is  to  lengthen  life 

No  up-to-date  housekeeper  uses  wood   nowadays  to  kindle  a  fire. 

The  Standard  Charcoal  Co.'s  hardwood  charcoal,  put  up  in  clean, 
tight  paper  bags,  is  cheaper,  safer  and  more  economical  than  wood  and 
gives    you    a    hot,  glowing    fire  a  few  seconds  after  lighting. 

For  sale  by  all  good  grocers  everywhere.  Sold  also  in  bulk  to 
founderies,  manufacturing  plants,  hotels,  restaurants  and  business  houses  by 

STANDARD  CHARCOAL  CO.,  ""toMlR^HlV 

TELEPHONE,  SOMERVILLE  80 
LOOK    FOR   THE    NAME    "STANDARD    CHARCOAL"    AND    ACCEPT    NO    SUBSTITUTE 


Shattuck  Sl  Jones 

INCORPORATED 

FISH  OF       ^ 
ALL 
KINDS 

128    FANEUIL    HALL    MARKET 

BOSTON,   MASS. 


OYSTERS 
CLAMS 


GROCERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

4()() 

H.  A.  Johnson  Co. 

Emil  Deininger 

407            '•     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade ) 

*J.  F.  Murphy 

408                 "       " 
(Fourth  Year  in  Paradej 

Andrew  Deering 

409 

Francis  L.  Lally 

*Francis  J.  Staffier 

410 

Samuel  Levingston 

Charles  Milchen 

411 

0.  G.  Mazman 

H.  Mazman 

412 

McNally  Bros. 

Edward  McMorrow 

413 

it           (( 

Edward  F.  McNally 

414 

(Fifth 

J.  E.  Moran  &  Co. 

Year  in  Parade) 

Stephen  Riley 

415 

"       "          "         "       " 

*Dennis  J.  O'Leary 

416         The  New  Eng.  Grocery 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Co. 

*Jack  Forgione 

417 

"       "                      " 

" 

Tony  Tradella 

418 

Parker,  Masters  Co. 

Charles  M.  Brooks 

419 

"       " 

Frank  Flood 

420 

*George  Davison 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

421 

" 

Frank  McCue 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

422 

" 

Joseph   Ryan                          (Blind  Horse)           1 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

423 

" 

Peter  Barker 

2 

424 

JohnT.  Powers,  Jr. 

Joseph  B.  Schernfeldt 

1 

425 

JuHus  L.  Putnam 

Julius  L.  Putnam 

1 

426 

W.  S.  Quinhy  Co. 

• 

Peter  F.Trainor 

1 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

427 

Charles  L.  Richardson 

&  Co. 

William  F.  Davidson 

1 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Compliments  of 


FOX     BAKERY 


GENERAL  BAKING 
COMPANY 


...Buy... 

RA.Kennett   CHASE'S 


TRUCKMAN 

and 
FORWARDER 


6  FULTON  STREET 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  Richmond  30 


SUPERFINE     FAWN 
WOOL     SQUARE 

BLANKETS 


Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes  —  Look 
for  the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade-Mark  — 
When  buying  Hack  Robes  look  for  the 
word 


<< 


CHASE" 


70 


GROCERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

428 

(i.  Saxarese  &  Son 

Salvatore  Canipana 

429          Alfred  Scaramelli 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Joe  Peirano 

430 

Semonian  Bro. 

Henry  J.  La  Croix,  Jr. 

431         Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Wm.  H.  Carter 

432 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro. 

Dana  Ward 

433 

"  "          "       "     " 

Thomas  Hanson 

2 

434 

"  "         "       "     " 

David  Hemion 

2 

435           "  "         "       "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Fred  C.  Splaine 

2 

436           "  "         "       "     " 

(One  of  these  horses  was  born  blind) 

Michael  McGreavey,  Vet. 

Driver  2 

437 

"  "          "       "     " 

William  S.  Randall 

2 

438           "  "         "       "     " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*A.  B.  Leighton 

2 

439                "    "             "          "       " 
(Fifth  Year  in  Parade  for  one  of  these  horses) 

*George  Brownell 

3 

440 

(This  \ 

C.  D.  Swain  &  Co.,  Corp.            Fred  Dysart 

lorse  lost  his  life  in  the  recent  fire  at  a  Roxbury  stable) 

441 

Swallow  &  Fales  Co. 

Samuel  Butehart 

442 

u        \.           u           w 

John  Sullivan 

443 

"    "    "    " 

Joseph  J.  Barry 

444 

J.  C.  Talbot 

Pius  McDonald 

445 

u        «        u 

J.  S.  Glover 

446          Timberlake  &  Small 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  F.  Dillon 

447                    "           "       "                       *Chester  B.  Eames 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade)           (A  lamb  goes  with  this  team) 

448 

"          "       " 

George  Roberts 

449 

" 

*Wm.  L.  Wholey 

71 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


ATWOOD  &  McMANUS 


Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of 


Wooden  Boxes 

Packing  Cases  and 

Kindling  Wood 


TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


Factory  and  Office 

CARTER  and  FOURTH  STREETS  CHELSEA,  MASSACHUSETTS 


■-  -f-^  you  want  the  best 
I  |-H  that  money  can 
*-  -''  buy  for  your  horse 

USE 

BIBBY'S  OIL  CAKE  FEED 

No  additional  cost  of  feeding  but  a  better  ration. 
Aids  digestion,  prevents  colic,  expels  worms. 
The     best    thing    ever    yet    ofifered    to    horse    owners. 


J.  LORINQ  &  CO. 

Watertown,  /Vlass. 

IMPORTERS  AND  SOLE  AGENTS  FOR  NEW  ENGLAND 
Telephone,  Newton  North  1008 

72 


G  ROGERS— Con  tinned 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


450 

T 

imbcrlake  &  Small 

Frank  E.  Curtin 

1 

451 

*A.  B.  Torrenee 

2 

452 

Williams  Bros. 

Charles  D.  Noone 

1 

453 

S 

S.  Pierce  Co. 

Thomas  Kelly 

1 

454 

Clarence  Smith 

1 

455 

James  Hay 

2 

45G 

Fred  Thornton 

2 

457 

David  Langelly 

2 

458 

John  Murphy 

2 

459 

Angus  Weegle 

2 

460 

Timothy  Driscoll 

4 

461 

*Patrick  Donoghue 

6 

462 

*Daniel  Singleton 

6 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


73 


East  Boston  Gas  Company 

Headquarters  for  the  Latest  Devices  in 

Gas  Appliances 


Light 


for 

Heat 


Power 


26  CENTRAL  SQUARE 

EAST  BOSTON,  MASS. 


8  EVERETT  AVE. 

CHELSEA,  MASS. 


TELEPHONES ; 


Office 
Office 
Works 
Works 


East  Boston  150 

Chelsea  19 

East  Boston  385 

Chelsea  327 


OFFICE  HOURS: 

8   A.  M.  to  6  P.  M. 
Saturdays,  8  A.  M.  to  8  P.  M. 

Office  will  close  at  ONE  O'CLOCK  on 
SATURDAYS  during  June,  July.  Au- 
gust, September. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


FULTON  O^BRION 

SOMERVILLE,  MASS. 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

A.  W.  KNIGHT 

XTruckman 

60  BROAD  ST..  BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


LONDON   HARNESS 
COMPANY 

JOHN  HANCOCK  BUILDING 

176  DEVONSHIRE  STREET 
27  to  29  FEDERAL  STREET 


SAVOY  WINE  and  IMPORTING  GO. 

WHOLESALERS    IN 

JForeign  anb  Pomesitic  Hiquorsf 

20I-205   Hanover  Street 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

Telephone,  Richmond  68 


74 


CLASS  24— PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


463          Bay  State  St.  Ry.  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

nV.  A.  Flynn 

2 

464          Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Daniel  Hayes 

1 

465                "             "           "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

^Chester  H.  Maddox,  Vet.  Driver 

1 

466                        "                    "                 "          " 
(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Coleman  McDonough 

1 

467                "             "           "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Patrick  Tansey 

2 

468                "             "           "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thos.  Murray,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

469                "             "           "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

^Andrew  Blake,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

470               "             "           "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Michael  Woods 

2 

471 

Cambridge  Gas  Lt.  Co. 

Eugene  O'Brien 

472 

u     «        « 

John  P.O'Brien 

473 

East  Boston  Gas  Lt.  Co. 

Frank  F.  Capen 

474 

"       "     " 

Eugene  P.  Redihan 

475             "         "           "       "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Herbert  A.  Oliver 

476         Maiden  Electric  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Joseph  Reardon 

477 

John  Collins 

478 

James  Rooney 

479 

Ralph  Bains 

480 

Charles  Hawkes 

481 

Louis  White 

482 

Maiden  «S:  Melrose  Gas  Co. 

J.  Monahan 

483 

"       "           "           "     " 

*John  J.  Murphy 

75 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


3= 


The  Advantages  of  Drinking 

BAKER'S 
COCOA 

The  Cocoa  of 
High   Qualify 

lie  in  its  absolute 
purity  and  whole- 
someness,  its  deli- 
cious natural  flavor, 
and  its  perfect 
assimilation  by  the 
digestive  organs. 

As  there  are  many  inferior 
imitalions,  consumers  should 
be  sure  to  gel  the  genuine  with 
our  trade-marl^  on  package, 

Walter  Baker  C^  Co.  Ltd. 

Established  1780      DORCHESTER,  MASS. 


Honey  Bread 

"Sweet  as  Honey" 


WHITE 
SEAL 
BREAD 

With  the  Real  Old  Home  Flavor 


FERGUSON  BAKERY 

GENERAL  BAKING  COMPANY 


COMPLIMENTS 


THE 

PUREOXIA 
CO. 


Compliments  of 


The 
Uni 


nion 


Ice 
Company 


BOSTON 


7G 


PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS     Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No 
Horses 


484  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  C 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 
485 

486 

487 
488 
489 
490 


Leo  Dunn 
Tb.oiras  Fl>  nn 
E\'ereU  Wright 

*Tin:othy  Sulli\an 
C.  Collins 
Samuel  Sullivan 

*  Jerry  Buckley 


CLASS  25— OIL  DEALERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No    of 

Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Horse's  N?me 


No.  of 
Horses 


491 

Gulf  Refining  Co. 

Lyman  P.  \\'ashburn 

1 

492 

Walter  J.  Sullivan 

1 

493 

..      ■   .. 

*Michael  Terrell 

1 

494 

;. 

Edward  N.  Fuller 

2 

495 

.. 

*George  B.  Phillips 

2 

496 

•• 

Lewis  E.  Lark 

2 

497 

John  H.  Sullivan 

2 

498 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade i 

Patrick  J.  Henshon 

2 

499 

T.  W.  Sullivan 

2 

500                

(Third  Year  in  Parade^ 

*Frank  P.  Kellex" 

2 

501         Standard  Oil  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade  1 

*  Alfred  J.  Goddard 

2 

77 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Pilgrim   Laundry  Company 


65=79  Allerton  Street 
Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone.  Roxbury  2880 


The 
Best 

That 
Can 


ENAMELED  IRON  SIGNS 

THE  BALTIMORE  KIND 

Waterman  &LEAVITT 

107  EUSTIS  ST.,  BOSTON ,  MASS. 


e 

tade 

or 

our 

apns 


'Expert  Opinions  do  not  differ- 


L.  S.  HARTSHORN 


Telephone,  Main  132 


JENNESS  &  COMPANY 
Truckmen  and  Forwarders 


139  Congress  Street 


OFFICE 


78 


Boston,  Mass. 


CLASS  26— MANUFACTURERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

502 

The  American  Agricultural 
Chemical  Co. 

*Michael  J.  Moynihan 

1 

502A 

American  Paper  Stock  Co. 

George  J.  Finch 

1 

503 

Harry  Aronson 

Frank  Merchione 

1 

504 

Atwood  &  McManus 

Edgar  Bryscn 

2 

505 

«       .< 

Thomas  Barrett 

2 

506 

,.       « 

Louis  A.  King 

2 

507 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Edward  Riley 

2 

508 
(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

John  Foley 

2 

509 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

George  Nay 

2 

510 

(Fourt 

h  Year  in  Parade) 

*Joseph  Cronin 

2 

511 

(Sixth 

Year  in  Parade) 

*01iver  Marion 

2 

•  512                  "       " 

(Eleventh  Year  in  Parade') 

*John  W.  Luzzatto 

2 

513                  "       " 

(Eleventh  Year  in  Parade) 

William  01i\'er 

2 

514 

Boston  Blacking  Co. 

Nicholas  Oster,  Jr. 

1 

515 

w 

*Joseph  LeClair 

2 

516 

"       " 

*Joseph  W.  Kelley 

2 

517         The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*\Villiam  Kenn\- 

1 

518 

John  A.  Dunn  Co. 

Elmer  Keith 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


79 


Office  Tel., 
Cambridge  257 


Res.  Tel., 
Roxbury  851 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 

THE 

Hunt-Spiller 

MANUFACTURING 
CORPORATION 


I.  FREEDMAN  &  CO, 


DEALERS  IN 


Masons'and  Plasterers'  Supplies 

LIME,  CEMENT,  PLASTER,  SAND,  CENTER  PIECES 
HAIR,  FLUE  LINING,  LATHS,  BRICK,  DRAIN  PIPE 

51=53=55  First  Street 

EAST  CAMBRIDGE 

Sole  Agents  for  Farnam-Cheshire,  Pittsfield 
and  Vermont  Lime 


Compliments  of 

W.  A.  Clement 

2159  WASHINGTON  ST. 
ROXBURY 


Telephone,  Richmond  245 


Established  1904 


R.  C.  Toomey 


Geo.   G.  Ormon 


Toomey  &  Ormon 

ggrocerteg  anb  Probigiong 

48  Crescent  Ave.,  985  Dorchester  Ave. 
DORCHESTER 


SILK  &  ALBERTSON 

Wholesale  Commission  Merchants 

FRUIT  AND  GENERAL  PRODUCE 

Potatoes  and  Apples  a  Specialty 

103-105  COMMERCIAL  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Reference:  Cosmopolitan  Trust  Co. 


Compliments  of 

C.   S.  Johnson 


80 


LLLl  IILLL.*JS 


MANUFACTURERS— Continued 


-i          1 

No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

519 

Fellows  &  Son 

J.  A.  Burchill 

1 

.520                "       '^       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Daniel  P.  Higgins 

1 

,521                "         "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  W.  Sheehan 

2 

522 

"     " 

*Jeremiah  J.  Donovan 

2 

523         Flash  Chemical  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Patrick  E.  Burke 

1 

524 

Ginsburg  Bros. 

Meyer  Lazar 

1 

.525 

M.  Gordon 

Edward  H.  West 

1 

526 

Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Corp. 

Timothy  Collins 

2 

527 

" 

Thomas  J.  Mullin 

2 

528 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Peter  Anastas 

2 

529 

1^ 

Little,  Brown  &  Co. 

John  H.  O'Connor 

1 

530 

"         "         "     " 

*Daniel  A.  Harrington 

2 

531         Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

James  Norton 

2 

532                  "       "       " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Frank  Winchester 

2 

533                 "       "       " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  J.  Harrington 

2 

534                 "       "       " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

Edward  Flanagan 

2 

535                 "       ' 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Richard  Brinkert 

3 

536 


National  Casket  Co. 


537 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Charles  E.  Walker 
Alexander  Simoneau 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


81 


Compftments 

of 
(K  fnenb 


Dover  Stamping  and 
Mfg.  Co. 

SIMON  BROTHERS 

Ceaming  anb  Jobbing 


OFFICE 
42  Lowland  Avenue  East  Cambridge 

Telephone,  Cambridge  3238-M 


JOHN  REARDON  &  SONS 
COMPANY , 

AUston  and  Waverly  Streets 
CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 
Telephone,  Cambridge  1849 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.   D.  CRESSY 


G.  B,  Howard  &  Co. 

ILeamsters 

anD 

Jforwarbers 

Clinton  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 


82 


MANUFACTURERS  —  Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  0 
Horses 


538  National  Casket  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Raiid  &  By  am 
Regal  Shoe  Co. 
S.  Rosenberg 


Rosenthal  Bros. 


F.  W.  Toothaker 


589 
540 
541 
542 
543. 
544 
545 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

546 
547 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

548  Sylvester  Tower  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

549  The  Simmons  Mfg.  Co. 

550  Welhnade  Gas  Mantle  C^o. 

551  J(jhn  W'yelh  (S:  Bro.  Inc. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


*C;eorge  E.  Bell 

Dave  Reademan 
Michael  J.  Cullen 
Robert  Howard 
Edward  Coodrich 
John  Sullivan 
Barney  Lishner 
*  George  Smith 

Henry  Morris 
*Charles  A.  Murphy 

*George  E.  Doyle 

George  H.  Bunker 
*John  P.  Donohoe 
*\Valter  P.  Furlong 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


83 


Compliments! 

of 

^  Jf rtenb 


McKinnon  &  McKenzie  Co, 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

BEEF,  PORK,  LAMB  AND  VEAL 
POULTRY 

Hotel  and  Restaurant  Supplies 

41  JOHN  ST.,  Cor.  NORTH 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Richmond  1231 


THOMAS  BENSON  WALTER  W.  BENSON 

Telephone,  Richmond  296 

BENSON  BROTHERS 


DEALERS  IN 


Beef,  Mutton,Lainb,¥eal,  Pork,  Lard, 

Haras,  Bacon,  Sausages,  Poultry 

Game,  Butter 

New  York  Hips,  Tops  and  all  Rattle  Products 

86  NORTH  STREET,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


Little,  Brown  &  Co.      Undcrhay  Oil  Co. 


Publisifjcrs 

anb 
34  BEACON  STREET,  BOSTON 


Lubricating  Oils 

73  Batterymarch,  Cor.  Franklin  St. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone,  Main  1183 


84 


CLASS  27     BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

=== 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNHl'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

552 

(Sixth 

The  Atlantic  Works 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Edward  J.  Sweeney 

1 

553 

Barbour-Stockwell  Co. 

*Timothy  Burns 

3 

554 

Barry  Building  Wrecking 

John  Costello 

1 

555 

Boston  &;  Lockport  Block  Cc 

.     Peter  Overland 

2 

556 

"       " 

Webster  J.  Gormley 

2 

557 

Crane  Co. 

Fred  Riley 

1 

558 

"       " 

R.  Burns 

1 

559 

..           u 

J.  Driscoll 

1 

560 

"    " 

G.  Smith 

1 

561 

.<            u 

Bartholomew  Moran 

2 

562 

.            u 

Otto  Gauss 

2 

563 

(Third 

G.  S.  Densmore 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Robert  F.  Quirk 

1 

564 

John  Farquhar's  Sons,  Inc. 

Timothy  F.  Moynihan 

1 

565 

John  Foran 

John  J.  Foran,  Jr. 

1 

566         I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Manuel  S.  Lobar 

1 

567 

"          "            "     " 

Anthony  M.  Sylvester 

2 

568 

"     " 

Samuel  Hamilton 

2 

569 

B.  J.  Healy 

John  M.  Brewer,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

570 

J.  B.  Hunter  &  Co. 

Mark  H.  Norton 

1 

571 

Edward  F.  McGuinncss 

John  J.  Leger 

1 

'572 

W.  S.  Kaulback 

*Edward  Norton 

1 

85 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 


Timberlake  &  Small 

NEPONSET 

Compliments  of 

The 
STAR 
Brewing 
Company 

Established  1882  E.  A.  HARRIS 

H.  A.  HOVEY  &  CO. 

Dealers  in 

Butter,  €,W%t  and  £mi 

No.  32  Faneuil  Hall  Market 

Telephone,  Richmond  930  BOSTON 


Compliments  of 

MAGEE'S 
EAST  BOSTON 
EXPRESS 

Telephone,  East  Boston  212 


Compliments^ 

of 

S  jFrienb 


D.  A.  SMITH  CO 
Truckmen 

Light  and  Heavy  Teaming 
45     ATLANTIC    AVE. 

Telephone,  Richmond  928 


AO    ROASTED   BY 

5HAPLEIGH  COFFEE  CO. 
BOSTON. 


BUILDERS  AND  BUILDING  MATERIAL -Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


573  The  Morss  &  Whyte  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

574  ' 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


Charles  J.  Curran 
*\VilHam  H.  Diiddv 


575 

S.  Slotnik 

F.  Kootowsky 

2 

576           "       '^ 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Adam  Kootowsky 

3 

577 

Samuel  Steinberg 

Samuel  Steinberg 

1 

578 

J.  H.  Townsend 

Albert  A.  Baker 

1 

579          H.  Wolpe 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Isadore  L.  Wolpe 

1 

CLASS  28— METALS  AND  JUNK 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

580 

L.  Aronfsky 

Cieorge  Williams 

581 

Morris  Baer 

Nathan  Baer 

581 A 

Max  Berman 

Max  Berman 

582 

(Fourt 

H.  F.  Brackctt  &  Co. 

h  Year  in  Parade) 

*Joseph  W.  Harris 

583 

(Third 

Harry  Frede 

Year  in  Parade) 

Andrew  Jens 

584 

Harry  F'icksman 

Staphan  Galai 

585 

(Fourt 

Patrick  O'Brien 

h  Year  in  Parade) 

Patrick  O'Brien 

586 

Ike  Sandler 

Ike  Sandler 

587 

S.  Smolker 

S.  Smolker 

588 

M.  Tigar 

MauricejTigar 

87 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Compftmente 

of 


JOSEPH  A.  WICKES 

House,  Sign  and  Office  Painting 

ESTIMATES  FURNISHED  FREE 

54  BROADWAY,  SOMERVILLE 

Telephone,  Somerville  253 

BRASS  SIGNS 
FOR    WAGONS 


REVERE  HOUSE 

BOWDOIN  SQUARE 
BOSTON 


R.  S.  HARRISON,  Proprietor 


C.  H.  BUCK  &  CO. 
52  East  Canton  Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


Telephone,  Main  1767 

A.  A.  Rowe  &  Son  Co. 

Forwarding  Agents 

and 

Bonded     Truckmen 

CUSTOM  HOUSE  BROKERS 

32  INDIA  WHARF,  BOSTON 

Est.  1869  Inc.  1910 


88. 


CLASS  29— BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to    be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


589 

William  Albrecht 

Albert  G.  Baranow 

2 

590 

„ 

*Frank  C.  Mutz 

2 

591 

.< 

Robert  Kelm 

2 

592 

" 

"^Rheinold  Stengel 

2 

593         Bay  View  Bottlinu;  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Martin  Haines 

594 

a              a 

Barney  Ziminskey 

595 

Conrad  Wenz 

59G 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Charles  Walsh 

597 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Patrick  Cronin 

598 

a               a                      a               (i 

Ignatius  Fettig 

599 

"          ,     " 

Frank  Kenny 

600 

A.  Berkman  &  Co. 

Morris  Seigal 

601 

Filippo  Bruno  &  Co. 

John  Moshillo 

602 

"     -       ..       .'     « 

A.  Platamio 

603 

"       "     " 

S.  Bruno 

604 

D.  Camelio  &  Co. 

Joseph  Camelio 

605 

..       «     « 

*Angelo  Graziano 

606 

L.  Capozzoli  &  Co. 

Joe  Sabia 

607          P.  Dempsey  &  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Chas.  E.  Williams 

608           "         "       "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Samuel  Broderick 

609 

(Third  Y 

11              a          11       i< 
ear  in  Parade) 

*John  J.  Shcchan 

♦Entitled 

to  Driver's  Badge 

Compliments  of 

F.  C.  WARREN  &  BRADFORD  CO. 

6  POST  OFFICE  SQUARE 

Telephone,  Brighton  147 

J.  H.  SULLIVAN  COMPANY 
Contractors 


LAKE  ST. 


BRIGHTON 


Corner  Commonwealth  Avenue 


TEL.,  HAYMARKET  2165-J 

A.  SANSONE 

Wholesale  Dealer  in 

Forei§:n  and  Domestic  Fruits 

47  PITTS  STREET        BOSTON 

WILLIAM  KRAUSS 
GROCERIES  and  PROVISIONS 

502  EAST  EIGHTH  STREET 
SOUTH  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Tel..  South  Boston  127-W 


A.  S.  SMITH,  Pres.  THOS.  COPELAND,  Supt. 

W.  C.  SMITH,  Asst.  Supt. 

ESTABLISHED    1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Hamineretl  Iron  and  Steel  Forgings 

OFFICE  AND  WORKS  AT 

340  MAVERICK  STREET 
EAST  BOSTON,  MASS. 

C.  S.  GILMAN  R.  C.  OILMAN 

AUGUSTA  &  GILMAN 

Teamsters  and  Forwarders 

32  HAWLEY  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Tel,  Fort  Hill  840 
Compliments  of 


THE  AMERICAN 
AGRICULTURAL 
CHEMICAL  CO. 

Manufacturers  of 

High  Grade  Fertilizers 


Telephone,  MAIN  5660 


D.  S.  WOODBERRY 


R.  S.  WOODBERRY 


D.S.  WOODBERRY  &  CO. 
FORWARDERS 


247  ATLANTIC  AVENUE  Room  41 

P.  O.  Box  1284  Telephone,  MAIN  4519 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


90 


BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


610  Dohcrly  cS;  Daly 

(Reconstructed  Horse  Last  Year) 

Oil 

612  Jos.  (;ahm  cS:  Soil 

613  "         "       "     " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

614  "  "  "       " 
(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

615  "         

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

616  ' 

(Sixth  Year  for  the  off  Horse  in  Parade) 

617  Maurice  Healey 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

618  W.  J.  Higgins  &  Co. 

619  "  "  "       "     " 

620  F.  J.  McCarthy  &  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

621  Savoy  Wine  &  Importing  Co. 

622  Sterling  Wine  Co. 


623 

Suffolk  Brewing  Co. 

624 

John  H.  Waters  &  Co. 

625 

William  J.  Welch 

626 

J.  Yoffe 

627 

(Third  Y 

Star  Brewing  Co. 

ear  in  Parade) 

628 

a 

629 

630 

" 

631 

" 

632 

- 

Michael  Daly 
Joseph  H.  Doherty 
Peter  Ward 
Charles  J.  Harrison 
*George  A.  Forsythe 


*Harry  A.  Melendy  2 

*Frederick  J.  Wilkins  2 

Frank  L.  Watson 

James  F.  Harrington 

John  Dineen 
*M.  H.  Burke 
*Frederick  F.  Pierce 

Thomas  F.  Lawless 

Michael  J.  Barry 

William  S.  Blaisdell 

Michael  H.  Hughes 

Frank  Le\ison 
*Th()mas  Riley 

Wm.  Dineen  2 

*  Peter  Maguire  2 

Con.  Oowley  2 

Thomas  McCarthy  2 

Thomas  Oiffin  2 


91 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Boyd  Brockton 
Transportation   Co. 


INCORPORATED 


BOSTON  OFFICES  : 


71   and;i39  Kingston  Street 
54  Chatham  Street 
89  Broad  Street 


Member  of  Expressmen's  League 


J.  C.  DRISCOLL 

TRUCKMAN 

AND 
FORWARDER 


46  FULTON  ST. 


BOSTON 


A.  L.  GRIGWAY 

Teaming 

84  BEACHAM  STREET 

EVERETT,  MASS. 

TEL..  EVERETT  936-M 

W.  J.  HIGGINS 


Compliments 

of 

B  iFrienb 


FRED  YEATANIS 

DEALER  IN 

Fruits  and  Vegetables 

1640  BEACON  STREET 
BROOKLINE,  MASS. 


MEMBERS  TELEPHONE.  FORT  HILL  1359 

BOSTON  CHAMBER  OF  COMMERCE 
NATIONAL  HAY  ASSOCIATION 


Importer  and  Grocer        PHELPS    BROS.   CO. 


128-134  EMERSON  ST. 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


COMMISSION    MERCHANTS 
431    Rutherford   Ave.      Charlestown 


92 


CLASS  30-  HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The   Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

633 

Faulkner  Grain  Co. 

David  W'antman 

634 

A.  Fitch  &  Co. 

Archie  J.  Campbell 

635 

"     "       "     "     • 

Charles  R.  Fitch 

636 

Landy  Bros. 

*John  \V.  Brown 

637 

" 

George  N.  Dunn 

638 

" 

*Frank  Riemer 

639 

Phelps  Bros.  Co. 

Harmon  Hassett 

640 

«       .< 

Robert  Waldron 

641 

"         "       " 

Charlie  Lynch 

642 

Est.  of  Jas.  E.  Robinson 

James  Castellucci 

643 

u           ..           <.           ., 

Nelson  Duchency 

644 

"  "  "  - 

Cornelius  E.  Courtney 

645 

Louis  Siegel 

Isaac  Ostrovitch 

646 

F.  E.  Wilson 

Arthur  Gardner 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


93 


American  Coal 
Company 

376  Albany  Street 

BOSTON 

Telephone,  Tremont  335 

Elm   Farm    Milk   Co. 

Distributers  of  Fine  Dairy  Products 
Pure  Family  and  Nursery  Milk.         The  "Ray" 
Inspected  Milk.      Certified  Milk.      Modified 
Milk.     Bulgarian  Sour  Milk.     Butter- 
milk.    Heavy,  Medium  and 
Light    Cream. 

Office  and  Storehouse  at 
WALES  PLACE,  DORCHESTER 

Off  247  Columbia  Road 

P.  O.  Address 
GROVE  HALL  STATION,  BOSTON,  MASS. 

TELEPHONE    CONNECTION 

RHODES  BROS.  CO. 

<!3roteries^  ant.  f^robisionsi 

WHOLESALE  and  RETAIL 

438  to  444  Tremont  St. 

170  to  174  Massachusetts  Ave. 

256  to  260  Warren  St,  (Rox.  Dist.) 

10  and  11  Harvard  Sq.,  Brookline 

BOSTON 


.^^Bi^S^^ 


OF    EVERY    KIND 
Implements,  Machines,  Woodenware 

Nursery  and  Seed  Trial  Grounds  Conducted  by 
The  Breck=Robinson  Nursery  Co., 

Munroe  Station,  Lexington,  Mass. 

Especiiil  attentirtn  paid  to  Landscape  Designing, 

I'lauting,  Forestry,  Horticulture,  etc. 

BrecK's  R.eal  Estate  Agency 

Farms,  Suburban  Properties,  etc. 

BrecR's  Btireati 

Furnishes  Approved  Employees,  Mercantile, 
Agricultural,  Horticultural 

JOSEPH  BRECK  6  SONS,  Corp. 

51*52  North  Market  St..  Boston.  Mass- 

Telephone  Richmond  2360 


Marine  Office  Towel  Supply  Co, 


564  WASHINGTON  ST. 


Telephone: 
Oxford   JOn 


Boston 


JOSEPH  ME5S1NA 

Teaming 

69  ATLANTIC  AVE. 

Tel..  Rich.   942 

M.  FREDIANI  &  SONS 

WHOLESALE   DEALERS   IN 

Fine    Confectionery 

AND  SALTED  NUTS 
326  Dudley  Street,  Roxbury 

Tt-LEPHONE,    MAIN    \ib7 

R.  F.  THURLOW 

(Uatcb  and  Clock  Repairind 

8  CITY  HALL  AVENUE 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


H 


CLASS  31     LUMBER 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,   as  they  tieem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 

Horses 


047  Eastern  Storage  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

648 
049 

650  ' 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

651 

(Third  Year  in  Parade ) 

652 
653 


C.  J.  Lari\ee  Co. 


054  Lawrence  &    Wiggin 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


055 
050 
057 
058 
059 
000 
001 
002 
003 
064 


Pope  Lumber  Co. 


S.  R( 


William  H.  Slieehan  1 

*  James  Blowers  1 

Joseph  F.  Sylvester  1 

*Louis  Blaine  1 

*Theodore  S.  Desmond  2 

^Patrick  J.  Quill  2 

Walter  G.  Gowing  2 

Jack  Welch  1 

Arthur  Geswell,  Vet.  Driver  2 

Percy  Baminzer  2 

*James  M'Carth>-  2 

William  Meane>-  2 

Patrick  Crowle>-  1 

John  Noonan  2 

James  McFaul  2 

Joseph  Beard  2 

*Timoth^•  L  Mansheld  I 


The  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.   *Elmer  H.  Peterson 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


95 


You  know  DRAKE'S  CAKE  is  Pure 
Let  your  children  eat  it.    The  inprredients  are  as  pure 
and  as  carefully  mixed  as  in  your  own  kitchen.     Get  it 
from  your  grocer.  Come  and  visit  Drake's  bakery.  Drake 
Bros.  Co.,  S.^  Savin  St..  Roxbury. 


Bay  State  Glean  Towel  Co. 

G.    L.    GOULDING,    Prop. 
—  ESTABLISHED  1886  — 


POPE   BUILDING 

Rooms  29-30-31 

221    Columbus   Avenue 

Telephone,  Tremont  381 


COMPLIMENTS    OF 

MERRIFIELD  &  COMPANY 

99  BLACKSTONE  ST. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


MICHAEL  SMITH 

—  MANUFACTURER  OF  — 

Eiflbt  and  Reavy  Barness 

WHIPS,  SPONGES,  ROBES,  Etc. 


Repairing  a  Specialty 


548  ALBANY   STREET 
BOSTON,    MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 


G.  O.  Lanphear 


J.  H.  Elwell 


F.  L.  MOORE  &  CO. 

CrucKiticn  and  forwarders 

246  Purchase  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  Main   7076 

c.  B.  smitn  &  Bro. 

Mbolesale 
(Brocers 

AND      WHOLESALE     DISTRIBUTERS 
AND     OWNERS     OF 

STATE  HOUSE  FLOUR 


96 


<    a 
2    S 


CLASS  32— ICE 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


665 

Morris  Polack 

666 

The  Boston  Ice  Co 

667 

u              .< 

668 

"     " 

669 

"    " 

670 

"    " 

671             "         "         "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

672             "         "         "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

673 

«     « 

674 

"    " 

675 

The  Fells  Ice  Co. 

676 

u     ,  ..      w 

Morris  Polack 

*John  Allison 
W.  O.  Davis 
Andrew  Doherty 

*George  T.  Hunter 

*W.  A.  Libby 

*W.  C.  Marks 

*John  McLellan 

Charles  Snow 
W.  McWinni 
Harold  Cox 


Guilford  Saunders,  Vet.  Driver     2 


«Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  33     CONTRACTORS 

The  Judges   may  award   such   ribbons,   First,   Second   ..r  Third,   as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

677 

Wm.  Loftus  Buckley 

Wm.  Loftus  Buckley 

3 

678 

Vincenzo  Gurcello 

Vincenzo  Gurcello 

1 

679 

" 

Piro  Salvatore 

1 

680 

(Third 

George  W.  Harvey  Co. 

Year  in  Parade) 

*W.  A.  Mellish 

1 

681 

J.  L.  McCarthy 

Frank  E.  McCarthy 

2 

682 

" 

Walter  F.  Hull 

2 

683 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

^Frederick  L.  McCarthy 

2 

684 

Louis  Tewhart 

John  Carroll 

2 

685 

Edward  J.  McHugh  &  Son 

James  Cleary 

1 

686 

"     " 

Edward  J.  McHugh,  Jr. 

2 

687 

David  O'Mara 

Matthew  Cooper 

2 

688 

" 

Frank  Gately 

2 

689 

Simon  Bros. 

John  Grace 

2 

690 

(Fourt 

h  Year  in  Parade^ 

Joseph  Perr>- 

2 

691 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

Patrick  Ahern 

2 

.     692 



— John  E .  Ferdi  na-ntt  - 

2 

693 

Joseph  A.  Simons 

2 

694 

Frank  G.  Silva 

2 

695 

D.  F.  Sullivan 

William  P.  Ring 

2 

696 

..  .. 

Joseph  P.  Harrigan 

2 

697 

"  " 

Joseph  A.  Lyons 

2 

698 

F.  E.  Wilson 

Edward  Fitzgerald 

2 

699 

"  "           " 

Dave  Bennett 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


98 


CLASS  34— COKE  AND  CHARCOAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such    ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

700 

E.  J.  Babcock 

Joseph  Guarino 

701 

(Fifth 

Year  in  Parade) 

John  Kelley 

702 

"    "                 " 

William  Campbell 

703 

(Fifth 

Year  in  Parade) 

Frank  H.  Hanson 

704 

(Fifth 

Year  in  Parade) 

Joseph  A.  Leach 

705 

"    " 

William  Kelley 

706 

Joseph  Morton 

707 

Edward  E.  Watson 

708 

A.  L.  Grigway 

Henry  Scott 

709 

A.  L.  Grigway 

710 

N.  E.  Gas  &  Coke  Co. 

*James  McAllen 

711 

Winslow  Allen 

712 

w     .,           «        «           «        u 

T.  Bernardo 

2 

713 

" "    "  "    "  " 

C.  Alvey 

2 

714 

«     u            .<        <<            u        <. 

William  Walton 

3 

715 

" "    "  "    "  " 

*T.  O'Leary 

3 

716 

Standard  Charcoal  Co. 

George  Mar  tell 

1 

717 

(<                                            K                       tl 

Harry  Martell 

1 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


99 


CLASS  35— COAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNERS  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


American  Coal  Co. 


719 

(Fifth  Year  in 

Parade) 

720 

(Third  Year  in 

Parade) 

721 

(Third  Year  in 

Parade) 

722         Batcheld 

723 

" 

724 

" 

725 

" 

72G 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


(I'ifth  Year  in  Parade) 


Albert  Fox 
*Fred  Jackson 

*John  T.  Murpliy 

*Thomas  Ward 

Moses  Zugary 
J.  Rison 
John  Walsh 
James  J.  Madden 
William  E.  Thompson 

*John  F.  Regan 


728 

F.  Callahan 

Thomas  J.  Hastings 

729 

City  Fuel  Co. 

John  Fennell 

730 

Dorchester  Coal  Co. 

Paul  T.  Budrow 

731 

"       " 

Frank  McWhinney 

732 

"       " 

John  Black 

733 

u 

Patrick  Donnelly 

734 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

E.  Merritt 

735 

"     " 

James  Fo.x 

736           "  "         "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*James  Evans 

737                "    "             "       " 
(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Palrick  Helion 

738 

(Third  \ 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Th()ma.s  Burke 

739 

Patrick  McCarty 

740            "  "         "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*James  Spikes,  Vet.  I 

Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


100 


COAL— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


741  C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

742  "     "       "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

743  "       "  "         " 

744  Frost  Coal  Company 
745 

746 

747  J.  L.  McCarthy 

748  Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

(This  Mare  was  one  of  the  team  that  won  the 

749 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

750  "  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

751  "  "       " 

752  "  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

753  Rescue    Mission   Wood    and 

Coal  Yard 


754 

a                       >  >                        a 

755 

" 

756 

Harry  Rosenthal 

757 

" 

758 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

759           "           "           "     " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

760 

F.  C.  Warren  &  Brad 

761 

762 

763 

764 

765 

766 

Patrick  Welch  2 

*Thomas  Rouse  2 

*James  Bland  2 

Daniel  Gill  1 

Harry  Pillsbury  2 

Frank  McCabe  2 

William  J.  McCarthy  1 

John  Kelly  1 

Heavy  Doubles,  Championship  Shield  in  1911) 

*Thomas  J.  Dalton  1 

*John  J.  Duggan  1 

*Patrick  Killian  1 

*John  Marshall  1 

Frank  Rogers  1 

Frank  Cummings  2 

John  Dorr  2 

Louis  Riback  1 

Thomas  Quinlan  2 

Edward  Kelley  2 

*Michael  O'Neil  2 

Michael  Hickman  1 

Stephen  J.  Craddock  1 

John  J.  Curran  2 

*Richard  Curley  2 

*Mark  Hernon  2 

James  Sullivan  2 

Jeremiah  Cronin  2 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


101 


CLASS  36^TRUCKMEN 

The  Judges  may   award   such   ribbons,   First,   Second   or  Third,   as   they  ileem   to   be 
leser\ed. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

1 ~~i 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

!         767 

Abbott  «S:  Fernald  Co. 

John  H.  Kelley 

1 

768 

Acme  White  Lead  Co. 

George  T.  AIcGuire 

1 

760 

Augusta  «S:  Gilman 

Herbert  H.  Gilman 

1 

770 

Everett  Forbes 

2 

771 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

^Clarence  E.  Pleshaw 

2 

772 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

William  Cotter 

1 

773 

John  H.  Skidmore 

1 

774 

*  Walter  A.  Stidstone 

1 

775 



*David  Walsh 

2 

776 

H.J.Baird 

James  Fenner,  Vet.  Driver 

1 

777 

H.  S.  Barron 

William  DriscoU 

1 

778 

*\\'illiam  Greene 

2 

779 

(Third 

J.  R.  Baxter 

Year  in  Parade) 

James  R.  Baxter 

1 

780 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Fred  Gallagher 

1 

781 

Baxter  &  Oldfield 

Dutch  Burkhardt 

2 

782 

"       " 

Calvin  Coe 

2 

788 

Frank  H.  Gilday 

2 

784 

C.  Bow  en 

Richard  Merrick 

1 

785            "       " 

(Thir.l  Year  in  Para.le) 

Robert  J.  Moran 

1 

786 

" 

Garrett  C.  O'Brien 

1 

787 

Daniel  F.  Cunningham 

1 

102 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TRUCKMEN     Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


^88 


C.  Bo  wen 


789 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

790  "       " 

791  "       " 

792  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

793  "       " 

794  \V.  C.  Bray 

795  

796  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

796A  William  M.  Buchanan 

797  E.  F.  Caldwell 

798  "     " 

799  Thomas  Campbell 
800 

801 
802 
803 

804  Joseph  Canessa 

805  \Vm.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

806  ■'    ''  ''-'        "         "     " 

807  '"'       "         "'        "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

808  J.  F.  Coursey 

809  Croft  &  Hall 


Otto  Thornrose  1 

Michael  F.  Deegan  1 

Eugene  Brickley  2 

Ernest  Ray  2 

*Robert  W.  Foster  2 

Phillip  Pardona  2 

Fred  Fyler  2 

Edward  Rasmussen  2 

*\Villiam  A.  Simpson  2 

William  H.   Rowley            .  1 

Barney  Ruben  1 

Charles  \N .  White  1 

Frank  Randall  1 

James  Coffey  2 

Joseph  Ricco  2 

Edward  J.  Duffy  2 

Thomas  Campbell,  Jr.  2 

Toiiy  Bagnera  1 

*John  Lahey  1 

Joe  Richardson      .      .  1 

*Ernest  A.  Miller  2 

Michael  Cadigan  1 

Edward  Fulz..  .    •               •  2 


103 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


810  Antonio  Cypoletta  &  Son 

811  Domenico  DeStefano 
812 

813 

814 

815 

816    Michael  Devereaux 

817 

818          Samuel  Dillon 


819  Joseph  E.  Donnelly 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

820  J.  C.  Driscoll 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


821 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

822         Wm.  M.  Et 


823  Frank  Gnecco 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

824  Morris  Goldman 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

825  C.T.  Gwvnn 


820  John  A.  Hanson 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


827 


828  "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

829  "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

830  J.  Harney 


831  "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


*Nicholas  Gypoletta 
William  Murphy 
Auruinnia  Cardello 
Salvatore  D.  Nenna 
Parquale  D.  Nenna 
Frank  Bannano 
Thomas  Glynn 
William  Galloway 
Samuel  Dillon 

*James  Carr 

*W.  H.  Driscoll 

*George  F.  Young 
Everett  E.  Dickie 
Frank  Gnecco 
Morris  Goldman 
H.  E.  Killen 
Wm.  N.  McConnell 
John  A.  Hanson 

*William  Dresser 

nViUiam  H.  Overy 
Maurice  Donnelh' 

*Fred  Harvev 


No.  of 
Horses 


104 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Bad^e 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of     1 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

832 

J.  Harney 

Daniel  O'Connell 

2 

833 

Everett  W.  Harrington 

Joe  Barney 

1 

834 

E.  S.  Harris  &  Son 

Fred  Doherty 

1 

835           "  "         "       "     " 

(Fifth  Year  in  I'aradei 

George  Ford 

1 

836 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

William  J.  Harvey 

2 

837           "  "         "       "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Peter  McDonald 

2 

838 

Maurice  Healy 

Frederick  R.  Watson 

1 

839 

T.  A.  Herlihy  &  Co. 

Daniel  Herlihy 

1 

840 

(Third  V 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Robert  Herlihy 

1 

841 

"    "             "             "       " 

Robert  A.  Herlihy 

1 

842 

"       " 

Patrick  Herlihy 

2 

843 

Beauty's 

Jenness  &  Co. 

colt,  two  years  old,  accompanies  her 

John  Grady 

1 

844 

"       " 

John  Doyle 

2 

845 

"       " 

Frank  Gough 

2 

846 

«       .< 

Peter  Morrison 

2 

847 

""       " 

William  Beckman 

2 

847A 

George  E.  Hildreth 

Frank  J.  Shaw 

2 

848 

D.  C.  Hoar 

David  C.  Hoar 

1 

849 

R.  A.  Kcnnett 

Charles  Lovering 

1 

850 

"    " 

*Gcorge  Rowan 

2 

851 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Eugene  Stinson 

2 

852 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

Fred  Joyce 

2 

853 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

M.  Freeman 

2 

105 


*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


TRUCKMEN -Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


854 

R.  A.  Kcniieti 

*()rrin  I.arabce 

2 

855 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*P>ed  Hitchcock 

2 

856          

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*E.  C.  Ricker 

2 

857 

"     " 

*George  Benham 

2 

858 

James  Kiley 

Michael  Condon 

2 

859 

William  Kinnear  &  S(mi 

Leroy  S.  Lamprey 

1 

8G0 

>.     .< 

Patrick  J.  Hurley 

1 

861 

A.  W.  Knight 

(^harles  F.  Holland 

2 

862 

Libby  &  Huckins 

Fred  Haseltine 

1 

863 

..     .. 

Walter  M.  Tower 

1 

864 

w     .. 

Louis  Romance 

1 

865 

Philip  Charbynier 

1 

866 

..     .. 

Ernest  Atkins 

2 

867 

..     .. 

Louis  Valiquet 

2 

868 

"     " 

Joseph  DeCoto 

2 

86i) 

Hyman  Ludwig 

George  H.  I  vers 

1 

869A 

H.  K.  Lyman 

William  E.  Donahue 

1 

870 

P.  J.  McCarton 

P.  J.  McCarton 

1 

871 

Albert  J.  Foster 

1 

872          Thomas  McEnany 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*P.  H.  Farrell 

1 

873 

Joseph  McGreevey 

Frank  Carroll 

1 

874 

John  Griffin 

2 

^ 

875 

"    1  .  ••.        v 

Edward  Rafferty 

2 

'^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


106 


TRUCKMEN— Continued 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


MrKee  Bros. 
Thomas  Meaney 
Merrificid  &  Co. 


Joseph  Messina 


F.  L.  Moore  &  C 


876 
877 
878 
879 
880 
881 
882 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

883  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

884  "  "       " 

885  

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

886  

(Seventli  Year  in  Parade) 

887 
888 
889 
890 
891 


F'.  Rotondo 
Michael  Tesler 
George  H.  Teroli 
Patricis:  J.  Wall 
L.  A.  Waterhousc 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


892 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

893 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade  for  the  Mare  In  this  team) 

894 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


895 


R.  &  O.  Woodsomc 


896  

(Third  Year  in  Parade' 

897         


No.  of 
Horses 


John  J.  Sweeney  1 

Thonias  Meaney  1 

Eugene  Mann  1 

Harvey  Hodgkins  1 

William  L.  Saunders  2 

Joseph  Messina  1 

*  Frank  X.  Brown  1 

Timothy  B.  Murphy  2 

James  F.  Sheehan  1 

Gilbert  McWilliams  1 

M.J.  C\inningham  3 

Frank  Costanza  1 

Michael  Tesler  1 

Hartley  M.  Johnson  2 

Arthur  B.  Cierard  1 

William  FoUins,  Jr.  1 

Fred  L.  Da\'idson  1 

nV.  F.  Meese,  Vet.  Driver  2 

*Fred  M.  Vance  2 

*George  Sharpe  1 

Patrick  Francis  1 

Joseph  F.  Burke  1 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


107 


TRUCKMEN-Continued 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

898 

R.  &  0.  Woodsome 

John  J.  Day 

2 

899 

D.  S.  Woodberry  &  Co. 

Daniel  Cnnvlcy 

1 

900           "  "             "           "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Edward  P.  Goodrich 

1 

901 

"  "             "           "     " 

Louis  G.  Barnes 

2 

902 

«     " 

WilHam  Vickery 

2 

903 

«     « 

*  Ernest  F.  Fan  joy 

2 

904 

"     " 

George  Vickery 

3 

905 

(Third  \ 

Youlden,  Smith  &  Hopkins 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Daniel  Ryan 

1 

906 

"                  "         "         " 

^Arthur  Esterl)rook 

1 

907 

«         "         " 

*Frank  Hughes 

1 

908 

.< 

*James  Finn,  Jr. 

1 

909 

" 

*Joseph  Babbin 

2 

910 

(Third  V 

ear  in  Paradej 

*John  G.  Bernard 

2 

911                        "                    "          "          " 
(Third  Year  in  Parade^ 

*Robert  Brunnick 

2 

912 

" 

*  James  Ryan 

2 

913 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Robert  Bowdoin 

2 

J 

914 

"                  "         "         " 

*\\'alter  Reese 

6 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


loy 


Q 
O 
O 

>     b 

OQ  pa 

Q    « 
w   * 

IN 

O     J 
CO     ^ 

w  -c 

M    Q 

O 
DC 


GLASS  37— OWNERS'  AND  FOREMEN'S  RUNABOUTS 

The  Judges  may  award  a  Silver   Medal  as  First   Prize,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the 
driver;   a  Certificate  and  Two  Dollars  for  the  driver  as  Second  Prize. 

First  and  Second  Prize  horses  to  receive  blue  ribbons. 

Highly  Commended"  ribbons  may  be  awarded  to  the  remaining  horses. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


915  Timothy  J.  Banne 

916  C.  Bowen 

(Thira  Year  in  Parade) 

917  Thomas  Campbell 

918  Dorchester  Pottery  Works 

919  N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  I'arade) 

920  N.  E.  Gas  &  Coke  Co. 

(This  Horse  won  the  medal  in  1912) 

921  I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

922  H.  P.  McManus 

923  W.  M.  Simpson 

924  S.  Slotnik 


Timothy  J.  Banne 
Charles  H.  McCarthy 

Thomas  Campbell 
Charles  W.  Henderson 
*Henry  La  Croix 
*Ivers  L.  Cushing 
*Louis  H.  Steinberg 
John  Redman 
Bertram  S.  Killian 
S.  Slotnik 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


ion 


CLASS  3»— FOUR-HORSE  TEAMS 
LAWRENCE  GOLD  MEDAL 

(This  Class  is  restricted  to  teams  taken  care  of  by  the  driver) 

The  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows:  First  Prize,  Lawrence  Gold  Medal,  to  the 
owner;  Silver  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Second  Prize,  Silver  Medal  to  the 
owner;  Bronze  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver.  Third  Prize,  Certificate  to  the  owner 
and  Five  Dollars  to  the  driver;  and  the  Judges  may  also  award  to  the  remaining  entries  such 
ribbons  as  are  deserved,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


925  I.  Freedman  &  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


*Mcinuel  T.  Folgert 


926  R.  A.  Kennett  *Levi  Clark  4 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade.  Won  the  (!old  Medal  in  1910  and  1912.  The  average  age  of  these  horses  is  is  years) 


927 


Merrifield  &  Co. 


Richard  F.  Boates 


928         John  T.  Scully  Foundation  Co.  *Michael  Curran.  Vet.  Driver 

(  Kifth  Year  in  I'ara'le.    This  tenin  won  the  gold  medal  in  1911) 


i^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


tThis  drivpr  rei'eiv»'8  this  year  one  of  th.'  two  gold  badges  annually  awarded  by  the  Association 
for  faithfulness  and  efficiency. 


CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

These  classes  are  open  only  to  horses  that  have  taken  three  or  more  First  Prizes  in 
previous  parades. 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  best  horse,  or  pair,  and  Five  Dollars  for 
the  driver;  and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  awarding  the  prizes  in  the  Championship  classes,  the  Judges  may  consider  the  age 
of  the  horses  and  the  number  of  Parades  in  which  they  have  appeared. 

CLASS  39— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,  LIGHT  HORSES 


N:.of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


929  John  F.  Barry 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

930  Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

931  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

932  "  "        "      ;' 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

933  City  Laundry  Co. 

(Xinth  Year  in  Parade) 

934  Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

935  W.J.Higgins&Co. 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

936  Louis  Jeselsohn 

(Ninth  Year  in  Paiade) 

937  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

938  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

939  Shattuck  cS:  Jones,  Inc. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

940  Henry  Siegel  Co. 

(NinUi  Year  in  Parade) 

941  Peter  Wolk 

(Kifth  Year  in  Paiade) 


*  David  J.  Barry 

*John  B.  Fay,  Vet.  Driver 

Timothy  Cleary 
*Frank  Bellis 

Harry  K.  Thompson 

James  Vincent 

Edward  F.  Flynn 
*Henry  McKenzie 
*Jeremiah  Connors 

Joseph  Garland 
*G.  Fred  Seamon 
*John  Coyne 
*Hyman  Wolk 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


111 


CLASS  40— CHAMPIONSHIP 

SINGLES,  MIDDLEWEIGHT  OR  WAGON  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  by  weight,  and  partly  as  doing  their  work  at  a  trot. 
The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the   driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


Horses 


942  The  Atlantic  Works 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

943  J .  Bierweiler  &  Son 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

944  Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

945  Chase  Express  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

946  Drake  Bros.  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

947  J.  C.  Driscoll 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

948  Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

949  Fox  Bakery 

General  Baking  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

950  "  "       " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

951  Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

952  B.  F.  Keith 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

953  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


nVm.  T.  Dunbar,  Vet.  Driver 
*Louis  C.  Bierweiler 

John  E.  Dempsey 

Herbert  Goulter 
*Frank  T.  Daley 
*J.  C.  Driscoll,  Jr. 
*George  Hamilton 

Mark  Roberts 

H.  Chatman 
*James  Haggerty 
*Maiirice  J.  Flynn 
^Bernard  Fox 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


112 


CLASS  41— CHAMPIONSHIP 

SINGLES,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver, 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No. 
Horses 


954         A.  J.  Bartlett 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


955  C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

956  "  "         "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

957  Boston  Industrial  Home 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

958  W.  C.  Bray 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

959  Howard  Bros. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

960  A.  W.  Knight 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

961  Maiden  Electric  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

962  D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

963  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

964  F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

965  Webber  &  Co. 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 


*Charles  G.  Vaughn 

*Patrick  Donahoe,  Vet.  Driver 

William  Fitzsimmons 

Frank  Riley 

Henry  W.  Jones 
*John  Howard,  Vet.  Driver 
*George  F.  James 
*Dan  Foley 

William  Curtin 

Francis  Cavanaugh 
*John  Arnold 
*Remus  Burt 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


113 


CLASS  42— CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Ciiampionship  Shield  for  the  horses  and   Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribhons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


966  Atwood  &  McManus 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

967  Bain  Bros.  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

968  W.  C.  Bray 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

969  R.  A.  Kennett 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

970  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

971  W.  M.  Robinson 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

972  Star  Brewing  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


*William  Argy 
*John  L.  Callahan 
William  M.  Parrott 
"^Ehvood  Demerritt 
*John  GilHgan 
*M.  F.  Connolly 
*John  A.  Morehouse 


973  F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co.  *James  J.  Curley 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


974 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


Patrick  Carroll 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


114 


GLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  A 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Red  Acre  Farm. 

Two  Second  Prizes:   Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

975 

OWNER'S  NAMF 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  s  of 
Service 

Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

Frank  I.  Hall 

Ted 

17 

10 

976 

Thomas  G.  Plant  Co. 

nVilliam  Russell 

Maggie 

16 

U 

977 

Chapin  &  Adams 

*Wm.  S.  Wilson 

Billie 

16 

12 

978 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

Walter  McKay 

Major 

16 

12 

979 

Merrifield  &  Co. 

(These  Horses  are  own  Brothers) 

Edward  F.  Marsten 

Roger 
Eli 

17 
16 

10 
10 

980 

..          <,       .. 

Fred  C.  Norton 

Jim 

18 

12 

981 

Libby  &  Huckins 

F.  E.  Heme 

Mary 

18 

12 

982 

Allen  F.  Carpenter 

(This  Horse  is  part  Arabian) 

*Charles  White, 
Vet.  Driver 

Richard  II 

18 

12 

983 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Edward  J.  Barrett 

Buck 
Florence 

20 
16 

14 
10 

984 

C.  G.  Parmenter 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

Frederick  F.  Dolahu 

Ned 

20 

12 

985 

John  W.  Whitney 

John  W.  Whitney 

Lady 

24 

10 

986 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Tom  Wood 

Paul  Giles 

27 

10 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


GLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  B 

First  Prize:  Silver  Medal,  offered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H,  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

987 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  8  of 
Service 

Barnet  Williams 

Barnet  Williams 

Frank 

18 

13 

988 

Pope  Lumber  Co. 

John  Mahoney 

Jennie 

19 

13 

989 

M.J.  Gallagher 

Edgar  Cahoon 

Mike 

19 

13 

990 

D.  S.  Woodberry  &  Co. 

Arthur  E.  Lawrence 

Old  Tom 

24 

13 

991 
992 

Howe  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  In  Parade) 

Brighton  Public  Market 

*Edward  T.  Earle 
*  Andrew  A.  Cunniff 

Frank 

Kitty 

19 
18 

14 
14 

993 

C.  Brigham  Co. 

*George  J.  Farrell 

Kate 

19 

14 

994 

L.  Hirshberg 

Sam  Hirshberg 

Tommy 

20 

15 

995 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

*John  Shea 

Jim 

21 

15 

996 

Patrick  Hurley 

Harry  Iveyes 

Bob 

20 

16 

997 

W.  M.  Fiske 

W.  M.  Fiske 

Babe 

21 

16 

998 

Otto  E.  Zaugg 

*Henry  Sheehan 

Ginger 

29 

13 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


116 


CLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  C 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many     Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  so1 
Service 

999 

W.  M.  Robinson 

D.  J.  Duane 

Bob 

21 

16 

1000 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

*John  F.  Connors, 
Vet.  Driver 

Frank 

21 

16 

1001 

Parker,  Masters  Co. 

Frank  Sullivan 

Maud 

23 

16 

1002 

A.  J.  Cunningham  Co. 

*Wm.  F.  McDonald 

Dolly 

26 

16 

1003 

W.  R.  Dixon 

This  Horse  is  to  be  retired  by  the 
owner  to  Red  Acre  Farm  after 
the  Parade 

W.  R.  Dixon 

Daisy 

29 

16 

1004 

J.  A.  Link 

James  J.  Winn 

Frank 

20 

17 

1005 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

*David  Alton 

Baby 

Johnson 

22 

17 

1006 

H.  W.  Brackett  &  Co. 

William  Webb 

Bill 

22 

17 

1007 

L.  Capozzoli  &  Co. 

M.  Mottola 

Nellie 

23 

17 

1008 

Frost  Coal  Co. 

Jesse  R.  Fames 

Bessie 

26 

17 

1009 

Barry  Bldg.  Wrecking  Co. 

James  Shealey 

Jack 

33 

17 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


117 


GLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  D 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Two  Third  Prizes:   Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


1010 
1011 
1012 
1013 
1014 

1015 
1016 
1017 

1018 
1019 


OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

Henry  Ungemach 

Mabel 

24 

18 

H.  Hayler 

P.  N.  Leonard 

Brinda 

25 

18 

Dorr's  Express 

*Harry  F.  Baker 

Babe 

25 

18 

Chase  Express  Co. 

Moses  P.  Durand 

Blind  Aggie 

25 

18 

L.  A.  WaterhoLise 

(This  Horse  has  won  a  Blue  Ribbon 
in  every  Parade) 

Edward  D'Stacio 

(Prince  is  not  In  competition ) 

Jumbo 
Prince 

24 

18 

Timberlake  &  Small 

William  Killeen 

Jack 

27 

18 

S.  M.  Handy 

Daniel  W.  Hayes 

Peter 

23 

19 

J.  C.  Talbot 

M.J.  Rowell 

Annie 

Rooney 

24 

19 

The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

Charles  R.  Whyte 

Billy 

26 

19 

The  Hoyt  Co. 

Albert  Beck 

Ben 

33 

19 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


118 


CLASS  43— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  E 

First  Prize:   Gold  Medal,  offered   by  the  Mass.  Society  for  the   Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Two  Third  Prizes:   Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Fred  I^.  Jordan. 

In  addition,  the   Judges   may  award   so  many  "Highly  Commended"   ribbons,   with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

1020 

Jacob  Bierweiler 

*John  Brown 

Kate 

25 

20 

1021 

C.  T.  Gwynn 

JefTerson  Earl 

Nellie 
Fannie 

26 
26 

21 
21 

1022 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

(This  Horse  has  be-  n  in  every  Parnd.) 

*Edward  J.  Tew, 

Vet.  Driver 

Lizzie 

28 

22 

1023 

M.E.  Bearse 

*John  J.  Tennihan 

Nell 

32 

21 

1024 

James  H.  Riley  &  Co. 

Jeremiah  H.  Moloney 

Bob 

31 

22 

1025 

W.  C.  Bray 

*Everett  Mclntire 

Peggy 

28 

23 

1026 

C.B.  Smith  &Bro. 

*Robert  F.  Atwood 

White  John 

29 

24 

1027 

N.  Leslie  Smith 

William  Stanley 

Frank 

29 

25 

1028 

C.  P.  Whittle  Mfg.  Co. 

Jos.  P.  Powers 

Baby 

30 

25 

1029 

Charles  H.  Cutting 

Charles  H.  Cutting 

Billy 

31 

26 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


110 


GLASS  44— CHAMPION  OLD  HORSES 

In  this  class  Mr.  George  W.  Harrington  offers  a  First  Prize  of  Five  Dollars. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  ofl 
tntry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


lorse  s  fName 


Horse's  Year  sof 
Age      Service 


1030  James  F.  Weir 


Frederick  E.  Weir 


Ned 


„,  .  ,  (Not  in  competition) 

Tins  horse  has  won  prizes  in  eight  siiocessive  Parades.    Won  the  Gold  Medal  for  Old  Horses  in  l'J05 

1031  Jenness  &  Co.  *Christian  Lorenson.t       Black  Jack      40 

Thishorsewon  the  Gold  Medal  inliilL'  Vct.  Driver     'Not  in  competition) 

1032  Alonzo  E.  Winn  Alonzo  E.  Winn  Chub 

This  horse  won  the  Gold  Medal  in  1911,  and  the  Championship  I'rize  last  year 


39       28 
36 
31       25 


CLASS  45— RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

This  class  is  for  horses  that  were  broken  down  by  over-work  or  neglect  or  abuse, 
and  restored  to  health  and  strength  by  their  present  owners. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  and  the  following  special  prizes: — 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal.     Second  Prize:   Bronze  Medal  and  Three  Dollars. 

Third  Prize:   Three  Dollars.     Shields  are  not  awarded  in  this  class. 

Miss  Eleanor  Lovett  offers  a  prize  of  Five  Dollars  for  the  most  deserving  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1033 

1034 
1035 
1036 
1037 
1038 
1039 

1040 
1041 

1042 


Red  Acre  Farm  C.  Lund 

This  horse  weighed  lOfiO  eighteen  months  ago;  now  weighs  1320 

J.  Cuneo  &  Co.  Joe  Cuneo 

This  mare  was  bought  for  .^7t;.00  live  years  ago,  being  almost  a  skeleton 


J.  Cuneo  &  Co. 


Louis  Latkouitch 


This  horse  was  bought  for  .*42.0U 


East  Boston  Gas  Co.  Elmer  V.  Newton 

This  horse  has  gained  90  lbs.  in  six  months 

John  J.  Kenny  Robert  A.  Burns 

This  horse  was  bought  for  .i?40.00  fourteen  months  ago 

John  J.  Kenny  William  H.  Duffy 

This  horse  bought  for  .^59.00  six  months  ago 

Moulton  «&  Holmes  John  J.  Bergh 

Houfjht  last  July  for  §50.ii0,  thin  and  sore. 
Owes  present  condition  to  the  constant  care  and  attention  of  the  driver 


1 
(Not  in  competition) 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 

1 


M.  J.  Shuckrowe  M.J.  Shuckrowe 

Bought  at  auction  one  year  ago,  being  almost  a  skeleton.    This  horse  is  thirty  years  ob 

Stetson  Coal  Co.  Frank  Fall 

This  mare  was  bought  in  an  emaciated  and  galled  condition  and  is  now 
the  heaviest  horse  owned  by  the  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


D.  Whiting  &  Sons 


Edward  S.  Kennison 


This  iKirso  was  bought  thin  and  weak  for  .Slt;it.Oi)  six  years  ago,  and  S60J.00  has 
recently  been  olTered  for  him 


t  This  driver  receives  one  of  the  two  gold  badges 
awarded  every  year  by  the  Association 


120 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  46— BARREL  RACKS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

A  friend  offers  a  prize  of  One  Dollar  for  the  driver  of  each  horse  winning  a 
blue    ribbon. 

James  Forgie's  Sons  offer  a  handsome  street  blanket,  to  go  to  the  owner  of  the  best 
horse. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1043  J.N.  Ar«ison 

1044  Timothy  J.  Ban ne 

1045  William  Corbett 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1046  J.  Cuneo  &  Co. 


1047        Eugene  P.  Gormley 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


1048  "       " 

1049  John  Morrisey 
1050 

1051  Florian  Neas 


1052  William  J.  Welch 

(Third  Year  in  Parade)' 

1053  J.  W.  Whitney 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1054  "     " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade,  Twenty  Years  Old) 

1055 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


Harry  Moore 
Michael  Banne 
*Samuel  S.  Corbett 

Joe  Banico 
Eugene  P.  Gormley 

Nathan  Cacirio 
Coleman  Clancey 
William  J.  Cosgrove 
Nathan  Cacicio 
William  J.  Welch 

Thomas  Bannister 

John  C.  Driscoll 

Ben  F'ord 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


121 


CLASS  47— HUCKSTERS 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


105(3        William  Anostopulos 

1057  Peter  Apostolu 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1058  George  C.  Bougopoulos 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


William  Anostopulos 
Peter  Apostolu 

*Nick  C.  Bougopoulos 


1059 

(Fourth  ^ 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Peter  D.  Demakes 

1060 

N.  Bournazos 

Peter  Bournazos 

1061       Joseph  Burns 

(  rhird  Year  in  Parade) 

Edward  T.  Fink 

1062 

William  G.  Burrows 

*John  E.  Burrows 

1063 

" 

*William  J.  Burrows 

1064 

Angelo  Campazna 

Angelo  Campazna 

1065 

Michael  Cardinole 

Michael  Cardinole 

1066 

Nick  Chagares 

Nick  Chagares 

1067 

T.  Chakonas  &  Co. 

*Nick  Regopoulos 

1068 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  Voulgaris 

1069  Joseph  Chincolo 

1070  John  T.  Coiley 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


1071 


Angelo  Conaxis 


1072        Patrick  A.  Conlin 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


1073 
1074 
1075 
1076 
1077 


Harry  Cotter 
Anthony  D'Angelo 
A.  P.  Dexter 
John  H.  Donahoe 
Henry  D.  Ellis 


1078  John  Feroli 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1079  Charles  Flanders 


Joseph  Chincolo 
*Wm.  J.  Coiley 

Angelo  Conaxis 
Patrick  A.  Conlin 

Horse  stone  blind  ;  27  years  old 

Harry  Cotter 
G.  Campanello 
A.  P.  Dexter 
John  McHatton 
Henry  D.  Ellis 
John  Feroli 

Charles  Flanders 


122 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  47— HUCKSTERS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  ma3'  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  o1 
Horses 

1080 

A.  J.  Floyd 

Charles  W.  McHatton 

1 

1081        Thomas  Ford 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

*Frank  Eustis 

2 

1082 

(Fifth 

Michael  Geanev 

Year  in  Parade) 

Michael  Geaney 

1 

1083 

Louis  Gefres 

Louis  Gefres 

1 

1084 

(Third 

Everett  W.  Harrington 

Year  in  Parade) 

Russell  Whitney 

1 

1085 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1086  John  J,  Harrington 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1087  Samuel  A.  Harris 

1088  Israel  Hill 

1089  T.  J.  Holland 

(This  Mare  is  23  Years  Old) 

1090  William  Ladas 

1091  K.  J.  Lowry 

1092  Patrick  J.  McArdle 

1093  Alexander  McDonald 

1094  Daniel  McLaughlin 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1095  A.  Mehos 

1096  S.  Mercurio 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


1097 
1098 


Robert  Murphy 
Nicola  Nardone 


1099  Thomas  F.  Nealon 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1100  John  Nicholson 


*Ralph  E.  Harrington 

John  J.  Harrington 

Samuel  A.  Harris 
Israel  Hill 
T.  J.  Holland 

Harry  Mastros 
T.  F.  Graham 
Patrick  J.  McArdle 
Alexander  McDonald 
Daniel  McLaughlin 

A.  Mehos 
S.  Mercurio 

Daniel  J.  Murphy 
Nicola  Nardone 
*J.  B.  Nealon 

*James  H.  Nicholson 


*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


123 


CLASS  47— HUCKSTERS 

DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of  No.  of 

Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1101 
1102 


Thomas  H.  Nicholson 


1103  Dennis  J.  O'Leary 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade)  (This  horse  is  21 

1104  Cornelius  O'Leary 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1105  Joe  Palmisano 

1106  F.  H.  Parker 

1107  Alvah  W.  Penny 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1108  Alfred  H.  Pigott 

1109  P.  O.  Pochinsky 

1110  Willard  P.  Reid 
nil  Myer  Riichkofsky 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


1112 

Joseph  Satter 

1113 

Morris  Schultz 

1114        Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1115 

" 

1116 

Morris  Siberman 

1117 

Silk  &  Albertson 

1118       Mark  H.  Simonds 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1119 

Frank  A.  Spedaro 

1120 

Samuel  Sulkin 

1121 

James  P.  Thomas 

1122 

Frank  H.  Toner 

1123 

Henry  H.  Wolk 

1124 

Otto  E,  Zaugg 

Joseph  H.  Nicholson 
Henry  McCue 
Dennis  J.  O'Leary 

years  old;  has  been  driven  17  years  by  Dennis  J.  O'Leary) 

Cornelius  O'Leary 

Joe  Palmisano 
F.  H.  Parker 
Alvah  W.  Penny 

Alfred  H.  Pigott 
P.  O.  Pochinsky 
Chester  Frye 
*Joseph  Ruchkofsky 

Joseph  Satter 

Morris  Schultz 

*E.  J.  Maclntire 

Robert  Shaw,  Jr. 
Morris  Siberman 
Simon  R.  Silk 
Mark  H.  Simonds 

John  Paladino 
Samuel  Sulkin 
James  P.  Thomas 
Frank  H.  Toner 
*Waltcr  S.  Willis 
Arthur  O'Neal 


124 


*Entitlcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


BLIND  TOM   IN   1906 


BLIND  TOM  IN   1907 
After  a  year  at  Red  Acre  Farm 


CLASS  48— EXPRESS 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1125  Salvatore  Andolino 

1126  Atlantic  Express  Co. 

1127  F.  G.  Bailey 

1128  

1129  

1130  J.  Bierweiler  &  Son 

1131  Fred  Blank 
1132 

1133 

1134  Boston  t^  Lowell  Express 

1135  Boyd's  Brockton  Express 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1136 

1137  E.  F.  Caldwell 

1138  Thomas  M.  Callahan 

1139  Malcolm  Campbell 

1140  Joseph  Celata 

1141  Joseph  Centorrino 

1142  Chase  Express  Co. 
1143 

1144 
1145 
1146 

1147  W.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

1148  H.  K.  Cushing  Express 

1149  Florindo  Diorio 

1150  George  B.  Dolliver 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1151  Fuller  &  Wilson 

1152  


Paul  x'\ndolino 
Frank  P.  Legge 
Michael  G.  LaRosea 
Robert  L.  Tennihan 
John  J.  Buckley 
Fred  Bierweiler 
Fred  Blank 

*John  H.  Blank 
John  Holland 
John  J.  Kelley 

^Herbert  A.  Lea 
George  W.  Williams 
Lewis  Fowler 

*Charles  T.  Callahan 
MalcoliTi  Campbell 
Joseph  Celata 
Joseph  Centorrino 
Roy  Heitman 

*M.  Hughes 
Ned  O'Brien 
F.  W.  Skidmore 
Clarence  Ulm 
Christie  J.  Clark 
William  T.  Hickey 
F^lorindo  Diorio 

*George  E.  Dolliver 
Fred  H.  McDermott 
William  E.  Johnson 


125 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  48     EXPRESS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1153        George  W.  Grace 


George  W.  Grace 


1154        W.  L.  Hallett  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  F.  Roche 

1155 

E.  Hapgood 

Leo  F.  Lynch 

1156 

W.  0.  Harrington 

Eugene  A.  Lomax 

1157 

"     " 

James  William  Coleman 

1158 

Hayes  Express 

Philip  Scribner 

1159 

« 

John  J.  Kelley 

1160 

Howe  Company 

Joseph  Fusoni 

1161 

" 

Joseph  Gerardi 

1162 

" 

Garfield  Alger 

1163 

" 

*Alfred  Hoyle 

1164 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  F.  Demon 

1165 

C.  H.  Keefe 

John  Keefe 

1166 

John  J.  Kenney 

John  J.  Kenney 

1167 

William  Kenney 

1168 

Louis  Lopez 

Manuel  Lopez 

1168A 

Lyons  &  Murphy,  Dor 

Express  George  Francis  Carey 

1168B 

u          u 

George  Francis  Moran 

1169 

Salvatore  Maccaro 

Salvatore  -Maccaro 

1170       Magee's  Express 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1171 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1172  Mahoney's  Hyde  Park  Ex. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1173  Dennis  Maloney 

1174  Marshall  &  Moulton  Express 


*Harry  R.  Miller 

*Bertram  A.  Milroy 

*Charles  W.  Tolman 

Leo  P.  Maloney 
Walter  Allen  Hall 


126 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  48— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  six  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

,         1175 

Thomas  L.  Matthews,  Jr. 

Thomas  L.  Matthews,  Jr. 

1176 

McKee's  Hingham  Express 

Joseph  Murphy 

1177 

" 

John  L.  McKee. 

1178 

Antonio  Mello 

John  Dias 

1179 

Angelo  Mexcuxio 

Angelo  Mexcuxio 

1180 

C.  Mirabile 

Carmine  Mirabile 

1181 

Edward  F.  Morley 

Edward  F.  Morley 

1182 

Thomas  F.  Moroney 

Thomas  F.  Moroney 

1183       M.J.  Mulcahy 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  E.  Mulcahy 

1184 
(Third 

Manuel  F.  Munise 

Year  in  Parade) 

Joseph  L.  Martin 

1185 

North  Shore  Express  Co. 

Leonard  Colburn 

1186 

Fred  Pennimans 

William  G.  Sweeney 

1187 

J.  H.  Potcherkoff 

J.  H.  Potcherkoff 

1188 

Ryan's  Transportation  Co, 

John  Horrigan 

1189 

" 

James  Mullen 

1190 

" 

John  Wentworth 

1191 

James  Sardina 

Joe  Corteze 

1192 

Savage  &  Son 

*William  D.  Higgins 

1193 

Isadore  Slotnik 

Isadore  Slotnik 

1194 

Taft  &  Mitchell  Express  Co. 

Edward  Burke 

1195 

" 

Frank  Kenny 

1196 

"     " 

Bert  Tucker 

1197 

William  W.  Taylor 

William  Hurd 

1198 

David  Perkins 

1199 

"           "      " 

George  Meehan 

1200 

Max  Waldman 

Max  Waldman 

1201 

(Fourt 

Gioacchino  ZoUo 

h  Year  in  Parade) 

Gioacchino  Zollo 

127 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


GLASS  49     GAB  HORSES 


In  this  class  the  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem   to   be   deserved,    and  a 
prize  of  Three  Dollars  to  the  driver  of  the  best  horse. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Ent7 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1202  James  E.  Brown 

1203  Mark  H.  Simonds 

1204  John  F.  Quinn 


James  E.  Brown 
James  Simonds 
John  F.  Quinn 


DEALERS'  CLASSES 

These    classes  are   open   to   all   dealers   in    horses.     The   horses   will    be    judged    in 
competition,  and  special  ribbons  will  be  awarded. 

GLASS  50— DEALERS'  HORSES 
SINGLES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 


1205  Henry  5.  Harris  Sons 
1206 

1207  William  Herberts 

1208  McKinney  Bros.  &  Co. 
1208A  A.  J.  Furbush 


GLASS  51— DEALERS*  HORSES 
DOUBLES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1209  L.  H.  Brock  way 

1210  "     " 

1211  Henry  S.  Harris  Sons 

1212  "        "         "       " 

1213  William  Herberts 
1213A    A.  J.  Furbush 


128 


STABLE  INSPECTION 


LIST  OF  FIRST  PRIZES,  STABLES,  FOREMEN  AND  NIGHTMEN 


Stables 
William  Albrecht 

Arcade  Stable 

Atlantic  Works  (J.  L.  Johnson) 

Boston,  City  of 

Parle  Department,  1188  Columbia  Road 

Paving  Department,  636  Albany  St. 

Sanitary  Service,  636  Albany  St. 

Sewer  Service,  Albany  St. 

Street  Cleaning,  Albany  St. 

Water  Department,  710  Albany  St. 

Hospital,  650  Albany  St. 

Paving  Service,  521  Commercial  St. 

No.  Grove  St.,  Sanitary  Service 

No.  Grove  St.,  Sanitary  Service 

Sanitary  Service,  Rutherford  Ave. 

Street  Cleaning  Department,  Rutherford  Ave. 

Paving   Service,   253    Medford    St.,    Charles- 
tow^n 

Street  Cleaning  Dept.,  Highland  St.,  Roxbury 

Sanitary  Service  Department,  Highland  St. 

Paving  Dept.,  Highland  St. 

Water  Dept.,  Gibson  St.,  Dorchester 

Sewer  Dept.,   Gibson  St.,  Dorchester 

Paving  Dept.,  Hancock  St.,  Dorchester 

Paving  Dept.,  Codman  St.,  Ashmont 

Paving  Dept.,  Child  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 

Sewer  Service,  Gainsborough  St. 
Sewer  Dept.,  Child  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 
Paving  Service,  Chestnut  Hill  Ave.,  Brighton 

Boston  Ice  Co. : 

54  West  First  St.,  South  Boston 
292  Rutherford  Ave.,  Charlestown 
330  Rutherford  Ave.,  Charlestown 
Lamartine  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 

Boston  Consolidated  Gas  Co. 
Boston  Blacking  Co. 
John  Bryant's  Sons 
Carter's  Ink  Co. 
City  Fuel  Co. 
Eastern  Storage  Co. 
Ferguson  Bakery  Co. 


Foremen 
Carl  Mutz 

Dennis  Mahoney 
William  T.  Dunbar 

Julius  Wcidner 
Daniel  Anglin 
James  Flanagan 
Patrick  Barry 
Wm.  Batts 
Patrick  H.  Bates 
Patrick  O'Rourke 
Charles  F.  Califrey 
James  E.  Burns 
Martin  Quirk 
Geo.  McGonagle 
Jeremiah  O'Leary 

Charles  Jacobs 
James  Shea 
John  Gallagher 
William  Shaughnessy 
Dennis  Shea 
Patrick  Thornton 
John  E.  Carney 
Thomas  J.  Clark 
William  J.  Galvin 
James  Fitzgerald 
John  Flaherty 
Bernard  Brady 
James  McKenney 


NiGHTMEN 

C.  Tuttle 
John  Harding 
Patrick  Martin 


W.  E.  Hawley 
John  Heussey 
John  Steele 
Lewis  Smith 
William  Wallace 
James  Jennmgs 
Joseph  Kelly 
Alex.  M.  Thompson 
William  Kenney 
Richard  J.  Austin 
B.  P.  Fay 
Peter  J.  Freeley 


J.  McLaughlin 

Wm.  Johnson 
Albert  Corbett 

James  Meehan 


129 


STABLE  INSPECTION— Continued 


LIST  OF  FIRST  PRIZES,  STABLES,  FOREMEN  AND    NIGHTMEN— Continued 


Stahles 

Fox  Bakery  Co. 

I.   Freedman  &  Co. 

Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

Jordan,  Marsh  Co. 

R.  A.  Kennett 

C.  J.  Larivee 

Magee  Express  Co. 

Maiden  Electric  Co. 

New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

New  England  Gas  and  Coke  Co. 


Simon  Bros. 

C.  B.  Smith  &  Bro.,  Robert  F.  Atwood,  Supt. 

Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Suffolk  Brewing  Co. 

F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co. 

J.  W.  Whitney 

John  Wright 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 


Foremen 

James  I.  Brooks 
Manuel  T.  Folger 
D.  F.  Healey 
M.J.  Commins 
John  Gilpin 
S.  Reddick 
Michael  J.  Whalen 
A.  E.  Whittemore 
Henry  LaCroix 
Ivers  L.  Cushing 


J.  A.  Simons 
Edward  Chute 
James  Hurst 
Patrick  Burns 
A.  Johnson 
Dan  Healey 


NiGHTMEN 


F.    D.  Robinson 


M.  J.  Shea 


D 


T.  E.  O'Neil 
(Day  man) 

E.  U.  Gardner 
(Night  man) 

W.  Barter 


Michael  Buckley 

James  Murdock 
Joseph  Perkins 


S.  Woodberry 

Charles  Hobbs,  foreman  of  a  City  of  Boston 
Cleaning   Department,   receives  a  first  prize,     Thomas 
Bros,  stable  receives  a  first  prize. 


William  Lawrence 
stable  on   North   Grove   Street,  Street 


P.  Harding,  foreman  of  Batchelder 


LIST  OF  SECOND  PRIZES 


Stables 
Harry  Agel 
Batchelder  Bros. 
Boston,  City  of 

Street  Cleaning  Service,  No.  Grove  St.  (small  stable 

Sanitary  Service,  H  Street,  So.  Boston 


Foremen 


318  E.  Eagle  St.,  East  Boston 
Boston  Ice  Co.,  Farnum  and  Gerard  Sts. 
William  C.  Bray 
C.  Brigham  Co. 
Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 
Eastern  Oil  and  Rendering  Co. 
Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Co. 
L.  D.  Johnson,  West  Dedham  St. 
Pratt  Bread  Co. 
Standard  Charcoal  Co. 

LIST  OF  THIRD 

Stables 
Boston,  City  of,  1480  Columbia  Rd.,  So.  Boston 
Boston  Ice  Co.,  Boylston  St.,  Chestnut  Hill 

130 


William  Cassell 

Richard  O'Neil 
William  Burk/ 
Everett  P.  Mclntire 
Robert  Colter 
Jerry  Mahoney 
Thomas  Scully 
John  J.  McNamara 
JohnT.  Mack 
Charles  Calder 
Patrick  Bierne 

PRIZES 

Foremen 
Maurice  Fitzgerald 
Prince  Phinney 


NiGHTMEN 
Patrick  Sullivan 


Patrick  Lane 
John  J.  Daley 

Clarence  Webb 


Peter  Katzman 
John  Murphy 


QUALITY  IN  WORK-HORSES 


Our  judges  are  instructed  not  to  award 
blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  to  any  horse,  no 
matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is 
a  horse  of  good  type  and  quality.  Quality, 
it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in 
a  work-horse  as  in  a  race-horse.  Quality 
might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness 
of  texture  which  good  breeding  produces. 
The  bone  in  a  well-bred  horse  is  more 
dense  and  less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a 
coarse-bred  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course, 
that  well-bred  horses  are  sometimes  defi- 
cient in  quality,  but  no  horse  has  quality 
unless  he  is  well-bred.  The  horse  with 
quality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less 
subject  to  disease  and  to  unsoundness  of 
feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse. 
Consequently  it  is  more  humane  to  use 
horses  with  quality  than  those  without 
quality. 

Quality  and  beauty  are  usually  found 
together,  and  yet,  as  all  horsemen  know, 
one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A  horse 
may  have  quality  without  being  in  the 
least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may  have 
a  ewe  neck,  a  large  head,  long  ears,  a 
Roman  nose,  a  sway  back,  flat  sides,  slack 
loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a  rat  tail; 
and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silky,  if  his 
head  though  large  is  bony  and  well-cut,  if 
his  ears  though  long  are  well-shaped,  if  his 
legs  are  flat  and  clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are 
of  fine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has 
quality.  Horses  of  the  Shire  and  Clyde 
breeds  often  look  coarse-  at  first  sight  on 
account  of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy 
legs,  but  in  the  best  specimens  of  these 
breeds,  the  long  hair  about  the  fetlock  is 
fine  and  silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not 
handsome,  are  clean-cut. 

Quality  is  thus  described  by  Professor 
Rufus  C.  Obrecht  of  the  University  of 
Illinois:  "  Quality  in  a  horse  is  of  prime 


importance.  This  term  when  applied  to 
horses  has  reference  to  their  bones,  skin, 
hair  and  muscles.  Its  presence  is  shown 
by  clean-cut  features  of  the  head;  firm, 
clean  bone;  tendons  well  defined;  close  fit- 
ting, glove-like  skin;  hair  fine  and  silky, 
an  abundance  of  finish  and  absence  of 
coarseness,  but  not  necessarily  small  bone. 
When  slightly  exerted  the  skin  will  show 
clearly  an  intricate  network  of  veins. 
Coarse  hair  is  usually  associated  with  a 
coarse  skin  and  a  soft,  spongy  bone  which 
is  weak  and  subject  to  disease.  With  qual- 
ity the  muscles  stand  out  prominently  and 
are  clearly  defined,  which  aids  in  giving  a 
horse  finish.  Quality  is  a  strong  indica- 
tion of  the  extent  of  a  horse's  endurance. 
These  two  characteristics  are  closely  asso- 
ciated, and  a  horse  lacking  in  quality  is 
comparatively  a  cheap  animal." 

This  Association  has  always  maintained 
that  it  is  highly  important,  from  the 
humane  point  of  view,  to  encourage  the  use 
of  horses  of  good  quality,  and  the  long 
experience  that  we  have  had  in  the 
inspection  of  stables  has  confirmed  this 
opinion.  In  many  large  stables,  where 
horses  have  been  bought  without  much 
judgment,  all  the  horses  may  be  divided 
into  two  distinct  types:  first,  the  well-bred, 
smooth-hipped,  fine-coated  type;  and  sec- 
ond, the  low-bred,  ragged-hipped,  coarse- 
haired  type.  The  horses  of  the  first  class 
will  look  fat  and  sleek,  whereas  the  horses 
of  the  second  type  will  look  thin  and  jaded, 
although  all  the  horses  do  the  same  amount 
of  work.  The  Old  Horse  Class  is  another 
illustration.  The  veteran  steeds  shown  in 
that  class  are  almost  invariably  horses  of 
quality.  They  represent  the  survival  of 
the  fittest ;  and  the  fittest  are  the  well-bred 


131 


BULLETINS 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins  may  be  had   on  application 

NO.  1— WATERING  AND  BEDDING 

FIRST  ISSUED  IN  1909 


During  the  past  five  months  an  agent  of 
this  Association  has  visited  157  stables, 
inckiding  ahiiost  all  the  large  livery  and 
boarding  stables  in  Boston  and  the  neigh- 
boring cities  and  towns.  One  object  of 
these  inspections  was  to  ascertain  the  prac- 
tice in  regard  to  watering  the  horses  during 
the  night,  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay, 
and  in  regard  to  bedding  them  in  the  day 
time,  as  well  as  at  night,  especially  on 
Sundays.  The  agent  submits  the  follow- 
ing    report: — 


THE 


WATERING    OF 
NIGHT 


HORSES    AT 


In  most  cases  all  the  hay  which  horses 
in  the  city  receive  is  fed  to  them  at  night. 
It  is  therefore  especially  important  that 
they  should  be  watered  during  the  night. 
In  an  inspection  of  over  150  of  the  leading 
livery  and  boarding  stables  in  Boston  and 
the  vicinity,  particular  attention  was  paid 
to  this  matter.  All  authorities  agree,  and 
experience  teaches,  that  city  horses  should 
be  watered  between  8  P.  M.  (9  P.  M.  would 
be  better)  and  midnight;  but  it  was  found 
that  less  than  half  of  the  stables  visited 
give  their  horses  water  after  7  P.  M. 

And  yet  more  stablemen  volunteered  in- 
formation on  this  subject  than  upon  any 
other  matter  considered  in  the  five  months 
during  w^hich  the  investigations  were  made. 
"  A  horse  comes  in  hungry,"  was  the  usual 
wa\'  of  putting  it,  "  and  he  wants  his  sup- 
per so  much  that  he  will  drink  but  little; 
and  he  ought  not  to  drink  deeply  at  that 
time,  even  if  he  wants  to.  Then  he  eats 
a  quantity  of  dry,  heating  food.  He 
shouldn't  have  water  right  after  eating; 
but  if  he  doesn't  get  a  good  drink  two  or 
three  hours  later,  he  will  go  through  the 
night  thirsty,  and  the  heating  food  will 
burn  out  his  insides  for  the  lack  of  tiie 
water  that  is  needed  to  give  the  nourish- 
ment of  the  food  a  chance  to  do  the  good  it 


ought  to  be  doing."  Moreover,  a  horse  not 
watered  at  night  is  very  apt  to  drink  too 
much  in  the  morning. 

This  night-watering  is  not  only  common 
humanity  in  hot  weather,  but  it  is  almost 
equally  valuable  in  winter.  For  appetite 
comes  with  the  bracing  effect  of  cold 
weather,  and  horses  eat  more  than  they  do 
in  summer.  Consequently,  if  this  extra 
food  is  to  do  its  part  in  giving  the  horse 
power  to  resist  the  cold  and  the  strain  of 
winter  work,  water  must  be  given  at  the 
time  when  it  will  do  the  most  good,  which 
is,  in  most  cases,  between  8  and  10  P.  M., 
or  even  later.  Nothing  does  so  much 
toward  giving  back  a  return  for  the  food 
given  in  the  way  of  extra  strength,  working 
endurance  and  good  condition. 

The  effect  of  this  night-watering  on  the 
blood  and  general  circulation  is  far-reach- 
ing. The  thirst  that  follows  the  digestion 
of  a  meal  is  the  call  of  nature  for  the  water 
that  is  needed  to  help  the  good  of  the  food 
to  get  into  the  flesh  and  blood  of  the  ani- 
mal; and  equally  important  is  the  part 
played  by  the  water  in  sending  the  waste 
matter  out  of  the  body  with  the  least  pos- 
sible wear  and  tear  on  the  organs  that  per- 
form this  indispensable  duty.  A  horse  that 
remains  thirsty  all  night  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  last  so  long  as  one  that  is  watered 
at  the  proper  time.* 


*At  a  men's  club  near  Boston,  I  was  once  making 
an  address  about  horses,  in  the  course  of  which  I 
urged  the  necessity  of  night  watering.  A  man  in  the 
audience,  who  proved  to  be  the  night  watchman  in 
a  large  stable  near  by,  declared  that  he  knew  of  a 
stable  where  the  horses  were  not  watered  at  night, 
and  would  not  drink  even  if  they  had  the  opportu- 
nity. I  asked  his  permission  to  test  the  horses  in 
this  respect,  and  we  went  to  the  stable  at  about  eleven 
o'clock.  There  were  twenty  horses,  and  we  unfas- 
tened them,  one  after  another,  so  that  they  could 
go  to  the  watering  trough  if  they  so  desired.  It  was 
a  bitterly  cold  night  in  midwinter,  but  of  the  twenty 
horses  all  but  one  drank,  and  several  drank  so  much 
that  I  feared  they  would  have  colic  in  consequence. 

H.  C.  M. 


132 


BEDDING  AND  REST 

There  were  twenty-five  horses  in  a  stable 
not  far  from  Boston  that  was  visited  one 
Sunday  morning.  The  horses  were  a  fair, 
average  lot  of  the  kind  used  in  delivery 
wagons  and  in  general  business.  Most  of 
them  were  in  reasonably  good  working 
order,  and  the  stable  had  the  appearance 
of  being  well-kept. 

Of  the  twenty-five  horses  in  the  stable 
twenty-four  were  standing  up,  and  just  one 
was  lying  down.  In  twenty-four  stalls 
there  was  no  bedding;  in  one  there  was  a 
good  supply.  One  doesn't  have  to  be  a 
wizard  to  guess  that  the  horse  that  was 
getting  a  needed  rest  was  in  the  same  stall 
with  the  bedding.  All  the  other  horses 
were  being  deprived  of  what  might  be  the 
best  part  of  their  Sunday,  namely,  the  op- 
portunity of  taking  their  weight  off  legs 
and  feet  that  usually  have  all,  and  more, 
than  they  can  do  to  stand  the  strain  of  the 
week-day  wear  and  tear. 

In  another  stable  there  is  a  horse  that 
works  in  a  single  grocery  wagon.  He  is 
between  the  shafts  three  days,  but  every 
fourth  day  remains  in  the  stable.  Each 
morning  brings  him  exactly  the  same 
breakfast,  and  there  is  absolutely  nothing 
in  the  care  given  that  tells  him  whether  he 
is  to  go  out  or  stay  in.  But  he  knows  how- 
to  keep  his  own  calendar,  and  every  fourth 
morning,  just  as  soon  as  he  has  finished 
eating,  he  lies  down  in  comfort  on  the  plen- 
tiful supply  of  bedding  which  is  kept  under 
every  horse  in  that  stable  at  all  times;  and 
he  frequently  stays  down,  the  better  part 
of  the  day. 

In  still  another  stable  there  are  pairs  of 
horses  that  are  used  half  a  day  and  rested 
the  other  half.  Encouraged  by  plenty  of 
bedding,  they  have  formed  habits  of  rest- 
ing their  legs  and  feet  at  every  possible 
opportunity. 


There  is  an  old  saying  that  a  good  city 
horse  could  use  up  four  sets  of  legs  and 
feet.  This  means  that  a  large  part  of  his 
bodily  strength  and  endurance  is  wasted 
because  lameness  and  suffering  wear  out 
the  unfortunate  animal  long  before  his 
time.  "  His  shoulders  is  all  gone  savin' 
his  legs,"  was  the  way  one  stableman  de- 
scribed the  condition  of  a  horse  that  had 
worked  his  body  muscles  to  pieces  in  trying 
to  ease  the  strain  of  his  battered  legs  and 
feet. 

As  in  the  case  of  watering  at  night,  the 
extra  expense  of  giving  a  day-time  bed  to 
a  horse  is  slight,  compared  with  the  great 
benefit  gained  from  the  rest  and  chance  for 
repairs  given  the  legs.  The  good  that 
comes  out  of  this  is  reflected  in  the  condi- 
tion of  the  whole  body;  and  all  who  own 
horses  should  see  that  this  chance  for 
needed  rest  is  given  their  horses  whenever 
they  are  in  thestable.  A  horse  will  not  lie 
down  on  the  stable  planks  unless  worn  and 
weary  beyond  the  point  where  it  is  right  to 
use  any  animal. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Agent. 

The  Directors  of  this  Association  ear- 
nestly submit  the  foregoing  facts  and  obser- 
vations to  owners  of  work-horses  and  to 
keepers  of  boarding  and  livery  stables, 
partly  as  a  matter  of  economy,  but  still 
more  as  a  matter  of  humanity. 


Postscript.  During  the  past  two  years  six  or  eight 
owners  of  work-horses,  with  large  stables,  have,  at 
our  suggestion,  given  their  horses  a  good  bed  through 
the  day  on  Sundays;  and  in  each  case  they  report 
that  the  horses  take  advantage  of  it,  and  are  the 
better  for  it. 

The  horses  owned  by  William  Bradley,  the  famous 
New-  York  contractor,  are  remarkable  for  lasting 
long,  and  in  Mr.  Bradley's  stables  the  horses  are 
always  watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay,  and 
they  are  at  all  times  particularly  well  bedded. 


133 


BULLETIN  No.  4 

VACATIONS  FOR  WORK-HORSES 

{Especially  from  the  Economic  Point  of  View) 
By  GILBERT  TOMPKINS  and  HENRY  C.  MERWIN 

(ABRIDGED) 


THE   EFFECT   OF   CITY   WORK   ON 
HORSES 

There  are  thousands  of  horses  hard 
at  work  in  cities  to-day  who  have  begun  to 
run  down  hill,  and  will  be  worthless  or 
nearly  so  within  a  year  or  two;  and  yet  if 
these  horses  could  be  given  a  rest  and  a 
chance  to  recuperate,  they  would  in  six 
months'  time  be  worth  almost  as  much  as 
the  price  originally  paid  for  them. 

Horses  are  scarce  and  high,  with  no 
prospect  of  lower  prices  or  of  a  better 
supply,  and  if  a  profit  is  to  be  made  from 
the  use  of  them,  the  loss  occasioned  by 
wear  and  tear  must  be  kept  down. 

Work-horses  in  the  city,  if  worked  too 
hard  or  too  fast,  or  if  not  properly  cared 
for,  or  if  weakened  by  age,  deteriorate  in 
the  following  different  ways: 

(1)  They  become  thin. 

(2)  Their  feet  become  sore  or  diseased. 

(3)  They  become  grain-burnt  or  other- 
wise weakened  in  digestion. 

(4)  Their  muscles  become  tired  and 
strained. 

Let  us  take  these  up  in  their  order. 

(1)  The  first  symptom  of  age  in  a 
horse  is  apt  to  be  a  falling-off  in  flesh. 
Others  become  thin  from  having  a  bad 
driver,  or  from  being  over-hurried  in  their 
work,  or  from  poor  feeding.  A  short  rest 
will  often  do  wonders  for  a  horse  in  this 
condition. 

(2)  The  Feet. — ^Unquestionably  the 
best  way  to  make  a  horse's  feet  last  in  the 
city  is  to  shoe  him  with  rubber  or  leather 
pads  and  plenty  of  tar  and  oakum  under- 
neath. This  keeps  the  feet  soft,  and 
deadens  the  concussion.  But,  with  the 
best  of  shoeing,  horses'  feet  will  give  out 
on  the  pavements;  and  nothing  will  tend 
to  preserve  their  feet  more  than  an  occa- 
sional let-up  during  which  their  shoes  can 
be  removed,  their  feet  can  get  back  to  the 
ground,  their  heels  can  expand,  and  fever 


in  the  feet  may  be  reduced  by  the  moisture 
of  dew  and  wet  grass,  swampy  land,  etc. 

(3)  The  Grain-Burnt  Horse. — It 
must  be  remembered  that  a  horse  at  work 
in  the  city  is  not  in  a  normal  condition. 
The  constant  feeding  on  dry  food,  and  es- 
pecially on  such  stimulating  food  as  oats 
and  corn,  produces  an  unnatural  condi- 
tion of  the  blood.  All  city  horse-owners 
know  and  dread  the  disease  of  the  kidneys 
called  "  black-water."  This  is  especially 
a  Monday  morning  disease,  and  when  a 
Sunday  and  a  holiday  come  together,  so 
that  the  work-horse  has  two  days  of  con- 
tinuous rest,  many  cases  of  black-water 
always  occur.  One  year  in  Chicago  there 
were  150  deaths  from  this  disease  in  one 
day.  Even  if  a  horse  does  not  suffer  from 
acute  disease  of  this  kind,  his  whole  system 
becomes  feverish  and  abnormal  from  years 
of  high  graining  without  any  chance  to  get 
back  to  nature,  such  as  a  horse  gets  by 
being  turned  out  to  grass.  Everybody 
who  has  seen  a  horse  turned  loose  in  a  lot 
after  being  confined  in  a  stable  must  have 
observed  how  he  first  paws  up  a  little  turf 
with  his  forefoot,  and  thus  gets  at  the  earth 
underneath.  He  is  more  anxious  to  eat 
this  earth  than  to  eat  the  grass,  and  it  is 
certain  that  the  earth  is  wholesome  for  the 
horse.  It  has  a  cleansing  effect,  and  is  a 
cure  for  worms.  Nothing,  in  short,  is  so 
good  for  the  digestion  of  a  horse,  especially 
after  long  years  of  confinement  in  a  stable 
and  high  feeding,  than  an  opportunity  to 
eat  grass  and  earth. 

(4)  Tired  Muscles. — ^Not  everybody 
realizes  that  a  horse,  to  the  eye,  may  be 
in  perfect  condition,  and  yet  his  muscles 
may  be  so  tired  and  strained  that  move- 
ment is  positively  painful  to  him,  and  any 
movement  but  a  slow  one  almost  impos- 
sible. W'ork-horses  and  hack-horses  in 
this  condition  are  often  seen  in  the  street, 
especially  when  they  begin  to  grow  old. 
These  horses  look  fairly  fat  and  sleek,  but 


134 


they  are  tired,  their  heads  droop,  they  have 
no  life  and  they  lack  energy  and  quickness 
of  movement.  Nothing  but  a  rest  will 
restore  these  horses;  but  a  rest  of  a  few 
months  will  do  it,  and  it  will  increase  their 
^•alue  at  least  one-half.  The  writer  of 
this  Bulletin  remembers  seeing  a  horse  used 
by  a  rural  free  delivery  mail-carrier  that, 
being  naturally  a  good  feeder,  and  having 
all  the  grain  that  he  could  eat,  was  in  fine 
bodily  condition;  but  he  did  double  the 
work  of  an  ordinary  horse,  that  is,  he 
travelled  twenty-three  miles  a  day  for  six 
days  in  the  week,  and  he  was  so  tired  and 
stiff  that  it  was  difificult  to  urge  him  from 
a  walk  into  a  trot.  It  is  from  this  stiffen- 
ing of  the  muscles  that  a  horse  really  grows 
old,  and  if  the  muscles  are  restored  by  an 
annual  vacation  the  useful  life  of  the  horse 
will  be  extended  to  an  astonishing  degree. 

A  VACATION  AT  HOME 

Many  stables,  especially  truck-horse 
stables,  are  so  situated  that  a  horse  can  be 
given  a  very  good  vacation  without  send- 
ing him  away.  That  is,  there  is  a  yard 
connected  with  the  stable  where  the  horse 
can  be  turned  loose  in  fine  weather,  with 
his  shoes  off.  His  feed  should,  of  course, 
be  changed  to  meet  the  changed  condition 
of  his  life.  His  oats  should  be  reduced  at 
least  one-half,  but  always  according  to  the 
age  of  the  horse,  and  plenty  of  bran  should 
be  given  to  him,  with  carrots,  turnips  and 
other  vegetables,  and,  if  possible,  some 
grass,  now  and  then,  sent  in  from  neigh- 
bor ng  farms.  In  this  way  the  horse  can 
derive  pretty  nearly  all  the  benefits  of  a 
vacation  in  the  country  without  the  ex- 
pense of  sending  him  away,  and  without 
separating  him  from  his  well-known  and 
beloved  companions. 

A  VACATION  IN  THE  COUNTRY 

It  is  hardly  necessary  to  say  that  the 
greatest  care  should  be  taken  in  selecting 
the  farm  where  the  horse  is  to  be  turned 
out  for  a  rest.  Few  farmers  know  how  to 
care  for  a  horse,  or  will  take  any  trouble 
to  make  him  comfortable.  It  must  be 
remembered,  of  course,  that  the  city  horse, 
being  used  to  high  feed,  cannot  have  all 
his  grain  taken  away  from  him,  especially 
if  he  be  an  old  horse,  without  falling  into 


a  worse  condition  than  his  former  one. 
Unless  he  is  a  young  horse  in  rich  pasturage, 
he  must  receive  some  grain  every  day,  and 
the  old  horse  will  need  a  good  deal,  per- 
haps one-half  of  his  usual  ration. 

Another  thing  to  be  looked  out  for  is  the 
annoyance  from  flies  and  mosquitoes. 
This  is  so  great,  except  in  farms  situated 
on  high  ground,  that  a  horse,  especially  a 
city  horse,  cannot  be  turned  out  all  day  or 
even  all  night  in  a  pasture  or  field  without 
losing  more  than  he  would  gain.  In  pas- 
tures of  northern  New  England,  where  the 
land  lies  high  and  the  nights  are  cool, 
horses  can  be  turned  out  day  and  night; 
but  within  thirty  or  fifty  miles  of  Boston, 
in  midsummer,  there  is  hardly  more  than 
an  hour  or  so  in  the  whole  twenty-four 
hours,  when  a  horse  can  be  turned  out 
without  being  driven  almost  crazy  by  flies 
in  the  daytime  and  mosquitoes  at  night. 


VACATION  BY  PIECEMEAL 

One  way  of  giving  a  horse  a  vacation 
is  to  increase  the  number  of  horses  at 
work,  for  any  firm  or  concern,  so  as  to 
permit  each  horse  to  lay  off  one  day  out 
of  the  six  working  days,  or  to  work  half 
a  day  only  for  one  or  more  working  days 
in  the  week.  For  example,  suppose  a 
given  concern  has  work  enough  to  keep 
four  three-hundred-dollar  horses  busy.  Let 
them  add  one  horse  to  the  equipment,  so 
that  there  will  be  five  horses  for  the  work. 
This  would  relieve  toil-worn  legs  and  feet 
and  over-strained  bodies  and  digestion, 
would  lessen  somewhat  the  amount  of 
grain  required  for  each  horse,  and  would 
greatly  reduce  the  annual  depreciation 
in  the  value  of  each  horse.  In  this  way, 
it  is  speaking  within  bounds  to  say,  that 
the  working  life  of  all  the  horses  would 
be  prolonged  from  an  average  of  six  years 
to  an  average  of  ten  years. 

It  should  be  remembered  also  that  a 
horse  in  good  condition  and  spirits  is  far 
more  efficient,  and  will  get  over  far  more 
ground  in  a  day,  than  one  that  is  jaded 
or  stiff  from  overwork;  and  besides,  the 
good,  active  horse  tends  to  make  the 
driver  a  better  and  more  efficient  employee. 
Another  consideration  is  the  advertising 
value  of  a  good  horse  in  good  condition  and 
spirits.  This  increases  every  year,  and  in 
cities  where  work-horse  parades  are  held 


135 


it  increases  very  fast.  Customers  look 
more  and  more  at  the  horse  used,  directly 
or  indirectly,  in  supplying  their  wants, 
and  a  fine  horse  gives  an  appearance  of 
success  and  up-to-dateness  that  is  worth 
much  more  than  it  costs. 

VACATIONS  FOR  POOR 
MEN'S  HORSES 

A  PROBLEM 

(Extract    from    a    letter    from    the    Ohio 
Humane  Society.) 
"A   difficult    problem    in    this   vacation 


work  is  that  of  the  poor  owner  of  a  horse 
who  earns  a  living  for  a  family  by  running 
an  express  wagon  or  peddling.  As  a  rule, 
he  is  too  poor  to  grant  the  horse  a  vaca- 
tion; but  \\x'  hope  to  provide  for  him 
later." 

The  same  problem  confronts  everyone 
who  tries  to  help  in  this  direction.  The 
only  way  to  meet  the  situation  seems  to 
be  to  provide  some  good  "  second-hand  " 
horses  that  may  be  lent — ^under  reasonable 
and  proper  restrictions — as  substitutes  for 
the  horses  that  need  rest.  For  a  short 
account  of  two  Homes  for  Horses  near 
Boston,  see  page  9  of  this  catalogue. 


The  Work-Horse 


He  feels  the  Springtime's  glowing  life 

In  every  coursing  vein; 

The  scents  and  sounds  of  wak'ning  Earth 

That  are  akin  to  pain,— 

And  feels  the  bit  between  his  teeth 

And  knows  the  fretting  rein. 


He  sees  the  grass,  — a  carpet  soft 
Of  living,  growing  green- 
He  sees  the  trees  far  overhead,  — 
A  shelter  and  a  screen; 
With  blindered  eyes  he  tries  to  see 
The  flowers  that  grow  between. 


The  cattle  on  a  thousand  hills 

Graze  through  the  livelong  day; 

Fair  are  the  pastures  where  the  sheep 

And  happy  lambkins  play; 

But  only  unremitting  toil 

Is  his—  to  bear  alway. 


He  cannot  crop  the  herbage  sweet 

Tho'  hungered  he  may  be; 

Even  the  water  to  his  thirst 

Is  giv'n  as  charity,— 

And  yet,  of  living  creatures — none 

More  beautiful  than  he! 


But  ever  while  he  lives  and  toils. 
Wherever  he  may  be- 
Always  I  breathe  a  little  prayer 
In  all  humility: 

"O  God,  remember  first  this  horse, 
"And  then, —  remember  me!" 

— Elizabeth  Jacohi 


136 


APPENDIX 


TESTIMONY  AS  TO  VACATIONS 
FOR  WORK-HORSES 

A  large  bakery  concern  in  Boston,  the 
George  G.  Fox  Co.,  says: — 

"  Our  system  is  to  give  each  of  our 
horses  two  weeks  at  pasture  every  year, 
sending  them  four  at  a  time  while  the 
season  lasts.  We  are  well  pleased  with 
the  results." 

EXPERIENCE    OF  A  LEADING  TRUCKMAN 

(Letter  to  the  President  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association.) 

Boston,  May  15,  1911. 
Dear  Sir: — 

I  write  this  letter  to  call  your  attention  to  a 
gray  mare,  stone  blind,  which  we  worked  in  our 
business  for  fourteen  years.  When  she  had  been 
worked  for  about  twelve  years,  she  seemed  to  have 
a  general  breakdown,  and  about  that  time  you  and 
I  had  a  conversation  in  regard  to  "  reconstructed 
horses,"  and  you  advised  me  to  give  this  mare 
two  months'  lay-off  and  see  what  effect  it  would 
have.  I  followed  your  instructions — we  have  a 
large  yard — and  this  mare  was  turned  out  every 
day,  and  most  of  the  time  we  hired  a  boy  to  take 
her  out  and  give  her  some  grass.  In  two  months' 
time  she  came  back  perfectly  well  and  seemingly 
as  good  as  ever.  We  worked  her  for  about  two 
years  from  that  time,  and  them  we  pensioned  her 
and  sent  her  to  a  farm. 

We  have  done  this  same  thing  with  three  others, 
and  one  of  these  was  run  down  so  badly  that  our 
veterinary  surgeon  advised  me  to  have  him  killed. 
He  declared  that  one  of  this  horse's  lungs  was  nearly 
gone,  and  thought  he  was  not  worth  one  dollar. 
We  had  used  this  horse  for  about  eight  years,  and 
concluded  that  we  would  try  giving  him  a  rest. 
After  three  months'  rest  he  was  one  of  the  hand- 
somest horses  in  Boston,  and  he  remained  so  for 
about  two  years,  and  last  year  was  shown  with  the 
"  reconstructed  horses  "  in  the  Work-Horse  Parade. 
This  year  he  died  of  blackwater  on  account  of  his 
being  so  fleshy. 

Our  experience  simply  shows  that  your  idea  of 
a  vacation  for  horses  that  are  run  down  is  correct, 
and  I  hope  that  many  other  horse  owners  will  make 
the  same  experiment.  The  results  I  have  no  ques- 
tion in  regard  to. 

X'ery  truly  yours, 
WM.  D.  QUIMBY. 


THE  EXPERIENCE  OF  AN  EXPRESSMAN 

"  This  horse  went  to  pieces  after  eight  years  of 
city  delivery  work,  and  wasn't  worth  anything. 
When  he  came  to  us,  his  legs  were  swollen,  kidneys 
weak,  one  lung  going,  and  the  other  almost  gone. 
He  couldn't  even  go  down  an  easy  incline  without 
stopping  and  struggling  for  breath.  He  was  given 
some  physic,  and  then  laid  off  for  the  summer.  We 
hired  boys  to  lead  him  (and  other  horses)  in  the 
grass  of  some  open  lots  while  the  dew  was  on  it,  and 
let  them  graze  afternoons.  We  gave  this  horse 
the  freedom  of  the  barn  and  the  yard,  and  after  a 
while  he  began  stealing  the  other  horses'  feed  on 
his  own  account.  He  finally  filled  out  and  improved 
so  much  that  I  took  him  for  my  own  use.  Now  he 
feels  so  well  that  he  won't  even  walk  up  hill.  He's 
also  a  little  on  the  alarm-clock  pattern;  when  he 
stands  in  front  of  the  office  evenings,  you  have  to 
tie  him  a  little  before  six  o'clock,  or  he  will  go  home 
to  supper  and  the  stable  of  his  own  notion." 


Other  horses  that  have  been  re-built  by 
this  same  owner  have  been  sold  well,  are 
in  satisfactory  condition  and  are  doing 
good   work. 


RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

In  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parade  there 
is  a  class  for  Reconstructed  Horses.  The 
medal-winner  in  this  class  three  years  ago 
was  a  chestnut  mare  bought  for  $75,  in 
the  fall,  from  a  provision  dealer  whose 
horses  are  knocked  about  by  boy  drivers. 
This  mare  was  restored  to  health  by  a 
rest,  and  sold  for  $300  in  the  spring.  Two 
years  ago  the  medal  was  won  by  a  horse 
only  eight  years  old,  sound  except  for 
blindness,  that  had  been  bought  in  the 
preceding  fall  for  $15,  as  he  lay  in  the 
gutter  too  weak  to  get  up.  He  then 
weighed  1040  pounds;  four  months  after- 
ward he  was  a  strong,  powerful  animal 
weighing  1360  pounds.  This  is  Blind  Tom, 
the  Red  Acre  Farm  Horse  whose  picture  is 
shown  in  this  catalogue. 


137 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


American  Agricultural  Chemical  Co. 
American  Coal  Co. 
Atlantic  Works 
Atwood  &  McManus 
Augusta  «S:  (iilman 


Babcock,  E.  J 16 

Babcock,  Frank  M ^8 

Badger,  E.  B.  &  Sons  Co.  G6 

Bain  Bros.  Co '0 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Limited  76 

Bartlett,  A.  J "8 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co .06 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co 38 

Bcllevue  Hotel 52 

Benson  Bros 84 

Bicchieri,  Ant.  &  Co 60 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co 14 

Boston  Badge  Co 32 

Boston  Forge  Co ^0 

Boston  Industrial  Home,  Inc.  ,52 

Bowen,  C. 66 

Boyd  Brockton  Transportation  Co 92 

Breck,  Jos.  &  Sons,  Corp 94 

Brigham,  C.  Company G4 

Brockway,  L.  H 48 

Bruno,  Filippo  &  Co 48 

Buck,  C.  H.  &  Co 88 

Bunker  Hill  Bottling  Co 58 


Camelio,  D.  &  Co 

Campagna,  Angelo 

Campbell,  Thomas 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co. 

City  Fuel  Co 

City  Laundry  Co. 

Clement,  W.  A 

Coleman  Bros 

Commonwealth   Hospital. 
Crane  Company 


Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy  ..  46 

Doherty  &  Daly 'A 

Dorchester  Ice  Co -r. 64 

Douglass,  J.  M 18 

Dover  Stamping  and  Manufacturing  Co S2 

Driscoll,  J.  C 02 

Drake  Bros.  Co .06 


East  Boston  Gas  Co 

Eastern  Oil  and  Rendering  Co. 
Eastern  Storage  Co. 

Eddy,  C.  F.  Co 

Eldridge  Baker  Co. 
Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 


Fells  Ice  Co. 

Ferguson  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 

Flash  Chemical  Co. 

Forgie's,  James,  Sons 

Fox  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 

Frediani,  M.  &  Sons 

Freedman,  I.  &  Co. 


Gahm,  Joseph  &  Son .^6 

Greene  Bros.  &  Co <6 

Grigway ,  A.  L 92 


Hanson,  John  H 62 

Higgins,  W.  J f.2 

Hill,  Smith  &  Co 38 

Hovey,  H.  A.  &  Co 86 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co 82 

Howe  &  Company 84 

Hoyt  Co.,  The 38 

Hub  Shoeing  Forge  Co TS 

Hunt-Spiller  Manufacturing  Co. '?0 


Jenness  &  Co 

Johnson,  C.  S. 
Jordan  Marsh  Co. 


Kelly  Peanut  Co.,  The 62 

Kennett,  R.  A 70 

KildufT,  John  T 38 

Knight,  A.  W 74 

Krauss,  William '. CO 


Leavens,  William  &  Co 48 

Little,  Brown  &  Co 84 

Locke  Coal  Co -54 

London  Harness  Co 74 

Loring,  J.  &  Co 72 

Lowncv,  Walter  M.  Co 34 


138 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS— Continued 


Magee  Express  Co. 

...86 

Maiden  Coal  Co 

50 

Maiden  Electric  Co.  and  M 

aldcn  &  Me 

rose  Gas 

Light  Co 

34 

Marine  Office  Towel  Supply 

Co. 

94 

McCarthy,  F.J.  &  Co. 

52 

McCarthy,  J.  L 

62 

McKinnon  &  McKenzie 

84 

McKinney  Bros.  &  Co 

42 

Merrifield  &  Co 

96 

Messina,  Joseph 

94 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

30 

Molassine  Co 

26 

Moore,  F.  L.  &  Co 

96 

Moxie  Co.,  The 

70 

National  Casket  Co. 

64 

New  England  Confectionery 

Co 

38 

O'Brion,  Fulton 


Quinby,  \V.  S.  Co. 


74 


Phelps  Bros.  Co 92 

Pierce,  S.S.  Co 24 

Pilgrim  Laundry  Co 78 

Plant,  Thomas  G.  Co .opposite   22 

Pureoxia  Co.,  The 76 


54 


Reardon,  John  &  Sons  Co 82 

Red  Acre  Farm 10 

Rescue  Mission  Wood  and  Coal  Yard 52 

Revere  House 88 

Rhodes  Bros.  Co .'. 94 

Richardson,  J.  H 54 

Roessle  Brewery,  The 36 

Rowe,  A.  A.  &Son  Co 88 

Rowe  Calk  Co.,  The .56 

Ryan's  Transportation  Co 64 


Sansone,  A. 

Savoy  Wine  and  Importing  Co. 
Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 
Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

Silk  &  Albertson 

Simon   Brothers 

Smith,  C.  B.  &  Bro. 

Smith,  D.  A.  Co 

Smith,  Michael 

Standard  Charcoal  Co. 
Star  Brewing  Co. 
Stetson  Coal  Co.,  The 
Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co. 
Sullivan,  J.  H.  Co. 

Talbot,  J.   C 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundry,  Inc. 
Thompson,    Walter 

Thorndike  Stables 

Thurlow,  R.    F 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Tisdale,  Wilson  Co 

Toomey  &  Ormon 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Association 


50 


Underhay  Oil  Co. 
Union  Ice  Co 


Warren,  F.  C.  &  Bradford  Co. 

Waterhouse,  L.  A 

Waterman  &  Leavitt 

Wellington-Wild  Coal  Co 

Whiting,  D.  &  Sons 

Whitney,  John  W 

Wickes,  Joseph  A 

Woodberry,  D.  S.  &  Co 


Yeatanis,  Fred 


92 


139 


INDEX  TO  CLASSES 


Class    1.      Fire  Departments 
"       2.      Police  Departments 
"       3.      United  States  Letter  Carriers 
"       4.      City  of  Boston — Park  Department 

5.  "     "       "  Public  Works  Dept. 

Old  Horses 

6.  Public  Works  Dept. 

Paving  Division 

7.  "     "       "  Public  Works  Dept. 

Street   Cleaning 
Service 

8.  "     "       "  Public  Works  Dept. 

Street  Watering 
and  Oiling  Service 

"       9.  Public     Works     Dept. 

Water  Department 

"10.  Public     Works     Dept. 

Sewer  Service 

"     11.  "     "       "  Public     Works     Dept. 

Sanitary   Service 
Albany  Street 

"     12.  "     "       "  Public     Works     Dept. 

Sanitary  Service 
North  Grove  Street 

"     13.      Deliveries — Newspapers 

"     14.      Milk 

"     15.      Bakers 
•    "     16.      Laundry 

"     17.      Deliveries — ^Miscellaneous 

"     18.  "  Department  Stores 

"     19.      Furniture  Makers  and  Movers 

"     20.      Provisions — Light  Horses 

"21.  "  Heavy  Horses 

"     22.      Confectioners 

"     23.      Grocers 

"     24.      Public  Service  Corporations 

"     25.      Oil  Dealers 

"     26.      Manufacturers 

"     27.      Builders  and  Building  Material 


Class  28.  Metals  and  Junk 

"     29.  Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers 

"     30.  Hay  and  Grain 

"     31.  Lumber 

"     32.  Ice 

"     33.  Contractors 

"     34.  Coke  and  Charcoal 

"     35.  Coal 

"     30.  Truckmen 

"     37.  Owners'  and  Foremen's  Runabouts 

"     38.  Four-Horse     Teams     (Lawrence     Gold 
Medal) 

CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

Class  39.  Singles — Light  Horses 

"     40.  "         Middleweight  Horses 

"41.  "         Heavy  Horses 

"     42.  Doubles—     " 


43. 

Old  Horses 
Division  A 
"       B 
"       C 
"       D 
"       E 

44. 

Champion  Old  Horses 

45. 

Reconstructed  Horses 

46. 

Barrel  Racks 

47. 

Hucksters 
Division  A 
B 
C 

48. 

Express 
Division  A 
B 
C 

49. 

Cab  Horses 

50. 

Dealers'  Class,  Singles 

51. 

"       Doubles 

ERRATA 

The  following  names  should  be  added  to  the  list  of  contributors 

MISS  JULIA  H.  WORTHINGTON 
MISS  ELEANOR  LOVETT 

THE  CRANE  COMPANY 

140 


HOWE  COMPANY 
JOHN  H.  WATERS  CO. 


THE  WOODBERRY  PRESS 
27  Beach  St.,  Boston 


BOSTON 
WORK-HORSE  RELIEF 

ASSOCIATION 


19  14 


REPORT  AND  CATALOGUE 


Boston  Work-Horse  Relief 
Association 


(INCORPORATED 


Twelfth  Annual  Work-Horse  Parade 


May  30th,  1914 


DIRECTORS 


HENRY  C.  MERWIN,  President 

State  House,  Room  356 

ARTHUR  PERRIN,  Vice-President  FRANCIS   PEABODY.  Vice-President 

Fisher  Avenue,  Brookline  Devonshire  Building 

LEWIS  A.  ARMISTEAD,  Secretary 

101  Milk  Street 

JOSHUA  ATWOOD,  3rd,  Treasurer 

City  Hall 

DR.  D.  L.  BOLGER,  35  Ash  Street,  Cambridge 
WILLIAM  RODMAN  FAY,  84  State  Street 
GEORGE  W.  HARRINGTON,  Mattapoisett 

JOHN  H.  JEWETT,  30  Nottingham  Street,  Dorchester 
LOUIS  deB.  LOVETT,  149  Winthrop  Road,  Brookline 
DR.  A.  W.  MAY,  3  Brewer  Street,  Jamaica  Plain 
W.  D.  QUIMBY,  79  Portland  Street 

DR.  F.  H.  ROWLEY,  President  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.,  45  Milk  Street 
G.  F.  STEBBINS,  12  Pearl  Street 

DR.  F.  J.  SULLIVAN,  51  Carver  Street 


GENERAL  AGENT 


A.  G.  MERWIN 
15  Beacon  Street 


FOREMAN  OF  HOSPITAL 
JAMES  McCarthy 

78  Northampton  Street 


OFFICE 

(OPEN  THROUGHOUT  THE  YEAR) 

15  BEACON  STREET,  ROOM  27 

TELEPHONE,  HAYMARKET  228 


BOSTON  WORK-HORSE 
RELIEF   ASSOCIATION 


WHY   THIS   ASSOCIATION   EXISTS 

OVED  by  the  great  suffering  inflicted  upon  work- 
horses, and  by  the  indifference  of  the  pubhc  toward 
them,  a  few  men,  who  had  a  passion  for  horses,  formed 
this  Association  in  the  year  1902,  with  the  idea  of 
holding  an  annual  Work-Horse  Parade.  It  was  hoped 
to  accomplish  two  things:  first,  to  induce  owners  and 
drivers  to  take  more  interest  in  their  horses  and  more 
pride  in  their  appearance;  and,  secondly,  to  induce 
the  public  generally  to  take  an  interest  in  the  horses  at  work  in  our  streets, 
and  especially  in  those  owned  by  persons  with  whom  they  have  dealings. 
Much,  we  believe,  has  been  accomplished  in  these  directions,  but 
much  remains  to  be  done.  Boston  now  stands  high,  comparatively  speak- 
ing, in  the  treatment  of  dumb  animals;  and  yet  lame,  thin,  jaded,  over- 
worked horses  are  still  seen  in  our  streets  every  day.  We  might,  if  we 
chose,  make  Boston  renowned  for  its  beautiful,  well-kept,  work-horses, — 
and  what  greater  attraction  could  a  city  possess! 

We  earnestly  ask  the  people  of  Boston,  if  not  from  motives  of  hu- 
manity and  justice,  then  from  a  feeling  of  civic  pride,  to  do  their  part  in 
bringing  about  this  end;  and  it  can  easily  be  done  if  every  inhabitant, 
male  and  female,  will  refuse  to  employ,  or  to  deal  with,  any  person  who 
uses  an  unfit  horse.  We  appeal  especially  to  the  women  of  Boston,  for 
experience  has  taught  us  that  women,  far  more  than  men,  are  affected  by 
the  sufferings  of  dumb  animals. 

WHAT   THE   ASSOCIATION   DOES 

The  first  Work-Horse  Parade  in  America  was  held  by  this  Associa- 
tion on  May  30,  1903.  Since  then  we  have  held  an  annual  Parade,  and 
almost  every  year  have  added  some  new  branch  to  our  work.  In  fact, 
the   name   of   the   Association,    which   was  originally   Boston   Work-Horse 

3 


Parade  Association,  long  ago  became  misleading,  and  in  July,  1913,  it 
was  changed  to  the  present  name, — Boston  Work-Horse  Relief  Associa- 
tion. We  maintain  an  office  open  throughout  the  year,  and,  beside  holding 
the  Parade,  carry  on  the  following  activities: — 

1.  A  free  hospital  for  horses. 

2.  A  system  of  Stable  Inspection. 

3.  The  showering  of  horses  in  the  streets  during  days  of  excessive 
heat. 

4.  A  system  of  assisting  purchasers  to  buy  horses. 

5.  The  holding  of  Meetings  and  Smoke  Talks  for  Drivers  and  horse- 
men generally,  with  the  display  of  stereopticon  pictures. 

6.  The  Preparation    and    Distribution  of  Stable  Rules,  of  Drivers' 
Rules,  and  of  Hot-Weather  Rules. 

7.  The  Publication  and  Distribution  of  Bulletins  in  regard  to  the 
care  and  treatment  of  horses. 

8.  Assisting  other  Societies  to  hold  Work-Horse  Parades,  and  giving 
addresses,  illustrated  by  stereopticon  pictures. 

These  activities  will  be  found  described  separately,  but  briefly  below. 

THE   FREE   HOSPITAL   FOR   HORSES 

The  Ashton  Lawrence  Free  Hospital  for  Horses  —  so  named  in  honor 
of  the  founder  and  first  President  of  the  Association  —  was  opened  on 
August  1,  1913,  at  78  Northampton  Street.  This  Hospital  is  intended 
for  horses  owned  by  poor  men,  and  no  charge  of  any  kind  is  made  for 
board  or  treatmept.  In  a  case  of  emergency  any  horse  will  be  received 
at  the  Hospital  and  treated.  Every  veterinary  surgeon  in  Massachusetts 
is  at  liberty  to  send  horses  to  the  hospital  without  notice,  and  to  treat  them 
there,  or  to  have  them  treated  by  the  Hospital  surgeons,  as  he  may  prefer. 

The  Hospital  serves  also  as  a  receiving  station  for  the  Animal  Rescue 
League.  The  League  assists  us  in  paying  the  rent  of  the  building  and  in 
many  other  ways.     Visitors  are  welcome  at  all  times. 

The  Hospital  is  intended  to  be,  and  is,  we  believe,  not  only  a  Hospital 
but  a  model  stable.  Every  patient  is  groomed  and  cared  for  as  if  he  were 
a  ten-thousand-dollar  race  horse,  and  it  is  remarkable  how  much  horses 
in  this  Hospital  gain  in  weight  and  general  appearance,  and  how,  in  many 
cases,  animals  that  enter  the  hospit  d  with  a  reputation  for  kicking  and 
biting,  become,  under  kind  treatment,  gentle  and  docile  in  a  surprisingly 
short   time. 

Some  extraordinary  cures  have  been  effected  at  the  Hospital,  and  we 
ascribe  them,   first  to  the  great  skill  of  the  veterinary  surgeon  in  charge, 

4 


Dr.  Frank  J.  Sullivan  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League,  and  his  assistant,  Mr. 
Archie  McDonald,  also  of  the  League;  and,  secondly,  to  the  careful  nursing 
which  the  horses  receive.  There  are  always  two  men  in  the  Hospital  from 
6  A.M.  to  6  P.M.,  and  a  night-nurse  from  6  P.M.  to  6  A.AL 

The  following  veterinary  surgeons  have  also  kindly  offered  their 
services  to  the  Hospital:  —  Dr.  P.  J.  Cronon,  Dr.  C.  W.  Delano,  Dr. 
Francis  Abele,  Jr.,  Dr.  T.  C.  Downes,  Dr.  E.  T.  Harrington,  Dr.  L.  H. 
Howard,  Dr.  Florence  Kimball,  Dr.  H.  \\\  Kingman,  Dr.  Daniel  D.  Lee, 
Dr.  A.  \\\  May,  Dr.  E.  F.  Manning,  Dr.  E.  P.  McKenna,  Dr.  F.  T. 
Mc(;iinchey,  Dr.  \V.  H.  Shannon.  Dr.  Edwin  F.  Schroeder,  Dr.  W.  M. 
Simpson,  Dr.  W'ilbert  Soule,  Dr.  J.  W.  Tobin  and  Dr.  Samuel  F.  Wads- 
worth. 

The  Directors  desire  also  to  thank  the  ofihcers  and  men  of  Fire  Engine 
Company  No.  23,  whose  station  adjoins  the  Hospital,  and  to  whom  we 
are  indebted  for  many  kind  acts. 

We  are  also  indebted  to  the  officers  and  men  of  Fire  Engine  Com- 
pany No.  43,  at  Andrew  Square,  who  rendered  great  assistance  to  the 
employees  of  this  Association  in  showering  horses  that  passed  through 
the  square  during  the  excessively  hot  days  of  last  summer. 

The  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.  has  kindly  furnished  free  transportation  to  the  Hos- 
l^ital  in  its  electric  ambulance. 

THE  FUTURE  OF  THE  HOSPITAL 

The  Hospital  was  started  mainly  with  the  intention  of  filling  a  much- 
needed  want  until  the  big  Hospital  of  the  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.  is  ready  for  use, 
which  will  be,  we  understand,  sometime  during  the  winter  of  1915.  But, 
after  much  consideration  and  discussion,  the  Directors  have  decided  to 
make  the  Hospital  a  permanent  institution,  believing  that  its  situation 
and  surroundings  are  such  that  it  will  serve  a  class  of  horses  and  owners 
that  would  not  otherwise  be  reached. 

Th6  Hospital  is,  as  it  should  be,  in  a  real  slum  neighborhood,  close 
to  the  traffic  of  the  city,  and  it  has  already  acquired  the  confidence  of 
poor  owners  throughout  the  city  and  in  the  adjoining  cities  and    towns. 

STABLE   INSPECTION 

The  most  important  work  of  this  Association,  next  to  the  Parade  and 
the  Hospital,  and  perhaps  not  even  second  to  them,  is  the  Stable  Inspec- 
tion. Entries  for  this  may  be  made  at  any  time,  and  by  stables  of  all 
kinds,  including  livery,  hack,  and  boarding  stables.  There  is  no  entry 
fee  or  charge  of  an\-  kind.     Every  stable  entered  is  inspected  by  an  expert 

5 


employed  by  us,  and  a  confidential  report  of  any  defects  in  the  treatment 
of  the  horses  or  in  the  management  of  the  stable  is  made  to  the  proprietor. 
The  stable  is  inspected  again,  and  perhaps  three  or  four  times,  —  as  often 
as  may  be  necessary. 

The  prizes  are  unlimited  in  number  and  consist  chiefly  of  silver  medals 
awarded  to  foremen  and  nightmen.  The  number  of  horses  in  the  stables 
inspected  every  year  is  about  4000.  The  form  of  stable  report  to  be  filled 
out  by  the  inspector  will  be  found  on  a  subsequent  page. 

We  are  indebted  to  the  following  inspectors  for  their  careful  and  con- 
scientious work:  —  E.  F.  Coldwell,  J.  B.  Matthews,  John  H.  Jewett  and 
Robert   Mason. 

THE   EQUINE   SHOWER   BATH 

For  the  past  three  years,  during  excessively  hot  weather,  this  Associa- 
tion has  maintained  nine  showering  stations  where  horses  were  showered 
with  water  from  hose  attached  to  a  hydrant,  or  w^ere  sponged  off  by  means 
of  water  pails  and  sponges.  These  stations  were  last  year  at  Andrew- 
Square,  Upham's  Corner,  Copley  Square,  Park  Square,  728  Tremont 
St.,  Charles  St.,  Cambridge  St.,  Minot  St.,  Portland  St.,  Scollay  Square, 
and  Dock  Square.  We  are  indebted  to  the  following  persons  and  corpora- 
tions for  the  free  use  of  their  water  and  hose  last  year,  and,  in  behalf  of 
the  horses,  we  most  earnestly  thank  them:  —  the  City  of  Boston,  Ceme- 
tery Department;  City  of  Boston,  Fire  Department;  the  Pilgrim  Congre- 
gational Church,  the  Bay  State  Trust  Company,  M.  F.  Hanson  &  Co., 
the  Boston  Wine  and  Spirit  Company,  the  Oriental  Tea  Company,  W.  D. 
Quimby,  Guy  A.  Raffa.  Thousands  of  animals  were  refreshed  in  this 
manner,  and  often  a  long  line  of  panting  horses,  exhausted  by  the  heat, 
were  waiting  their  turn. 

This  year  the  showering  will  be  continued  and  drivers'  buckets  will 
be  filled  from  the  hose,  but  our  buckets  and  sponges  will  have  to  be  dis- 
pensed with,  in  accordance  with  the  regulations  of  the  Commissioner 
of  Animal   Industry. 

ASSISTANCE  TO   PURCHASERS   OF   HORSES 

The  frauds  perpetrated  upon  buyers  of  horses,  and  the  cruelties  in- 
flicted upon  worn-out  animals  in  order  to  prepare  them  for  sale,  have  greatly 
increased  during  recent  years.  Four-fifths  of  the  horse  advertisements 
in  the  Sunday  papers  are  fraudulent.  To  combat  these  evils,  the  following 
scheme  has  been  devised :  —  We  have  made  a  contract  with  several  of  the 
leading,  reputable  dealers  in  Boston  and  the  vicinity  by  which  they  agree 


to  sell  a  good  horse  to  any  person  recommended  by  us,  and,  in  case  of  any 
dispute  arising  from  the  sale,  to  abide  by  our  decision.  Any  person,  resident 
anywhere  in  New  England,  can  have  the  benefit  of  this  agreement  by 
calling  at  our  office  and  registering  his  name  and  address.  We  make  no 
charge  for  this  service  either  to  customer  or  dealer.  But,  in  order  not  to 
encourage  the  traffic  in  unfit  horses,  we  fix  a  minimum  price,  and  do  not 
recommend  any  customer  unless  he  is  prepared  to  pay  that  sum.  At 
present,  the  minimum  price  is  $100  for  a  horse  under  1300  pounds;  $125 
for  a  horse  over  1300  pounds. 

MEETINGS   FOR  DRIVERS 

A  Smoke  Talk  and  Meeting  for  Drivers,  Stablemen  and  other  persons 
was  held  at  Kingsley  Hall  on  Bowdoin  Street,  in  February,  with  a  stere- 
opticon  exhibition  of  pictures  of  horses.  During  the  present  year  we 
mean  to  give  two  such  entertainments,  if  our  funds  permit,  at  which  we 
hope  to  have  the  assistance  of  some  good  singers  who  are  employed  as 
stablemen  by  the  City  of  Boston  and  who  sang  this  year  at  a  meeting  of 
the  Stablemen's  Union. 

STABLE  POSTERS 

We  have  prepared  and  published  for  free  distribution,  Hot  Weather 
Rules,  Stable  Rules  and  Drivers'  Rules,  and  have  given  away  about  15,950 
copies  of  the  Hot  Weather  Rules,  and  about  17,300  copies,  each,  of  the 
Drivers'  Rules  and  Stable  Rules.  These  Rules  were  prepared  with  the 
greatest  care,  and  after  consultation  with  many  veterinary  surgeons  and 
practical  horsemen,  including  officers  of  the  United  States  Cavalry.  We 
have  had  requests  for  them  from  all  parts  of  this  country,  from  Manitoba 
and  Alberta,  from  Nova  Scotia  and  Newfoundland,  from  the  Philippine 
Islands  and  from  Ireland.  They  have  been  adopted  by  the  Massachusetts 
Agricultural  College  for  the  instruction  of  its  students,  are  soon  to  be 
translated  for  use  by  the  Government  among  Indian  tribes,  and  were  re- 
cently reprinted  for  its  own  use  by  a  corporation  in  Maine  owning  nine 
hundred  horses. 

These  Rules  printed  on  plain  paper  are  given  aw^ay  to  all  who  apply 
for  them,  and  we  furnish  them  printed  on  cardboard  as  posters  at  cost 
price,  namely,  three  cents  apiece. 

To  Horseshoers  and  Livery  Stablekeepers  we  will  send  the  cardboard 
Rules  free,  if  application  for  them  is  made  at  our  office  by  telephone  or 
letter. 

7 


BULLETINS 

The  Association  issued  in  1910  a  Bulletin  on  Watering  and  Bedding, 
by  Gilbert  Tompkins.  This  Bulletin  has  been  widely  read  and  highly  com- 
mended. A  revised  edition  was  published  in  August,  1911,  and  it  is  now 
reprinted,  with  some  additions,  at  the  end  of  this  catalogue,  where  will  be 
found  also  a  Bulletin  on  Vacations  for  Work-Horses.  We  believe  it  to  be  a 
fact  that  an  annual  vacation  for  the  work-horse,  and  especially  for  the  old 
work-horse,  is  a  matter  not  only  of  humanity,  but  of  economy. 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins  issued  by  this  Association  may  be  had  free 
on  application.     The  Bulletins  thus  far  issued  are: — 

No.  1.     Watering  and  Bedding,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  2.     The  Disposal  of  Old  Horses,  by  Henry  C.  Merwin. 

No.  3.     The  Motor-Wagon  and  the  Work-Horse,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins. 

No.  4.  Vacations  for  Work-Horses,  by  Gilbert  Tompkins  and  Henry 
C.  Merwin. 

ASSISTING   OTHER   SOCIETIES 

We  have  almost  daily  requests  for  information  about  \A'ork-Horse 
Parades  and'  Work-Horses  from  all  parts  of  this  country,  and  from  foreign 
lands.  We  have  a  collection  of  slides  for  the  stereopticon  display  of  horse- 
pictures,  w^hich  we  are  always  glad  to  lend  to  any  humane  association  or 
person.  We  are  ready  to  assist  in  the  holding  of  a  Work-Horse  Parade 
anywhere  in  the  State,  and  have  done  so  in  Lynn,  Waltham,  Newton,  and 
Framingham. 

THE  DISPOSAL  OF  OLD  HORSES 

It  is  a  melancholy  fact  that  many  of  the  fine  horses  to  be  seen  in  the 
Parade  this  year  will  be  sold  when  they  become  old,  stiff  or  lame,  and 
will,  in  many  cases,  suffer  great  misery  before  death  releases  them.  There 
is  a  growing  feeling  in  the  community  that  old  or  disabled  horses  should 
not  be  sold,  but  should  be  killed  or  otherwise  disposed  of  in  a  humane 
manner.  To  sell  a  worn-out  horse,  and  thus  consign  him  to  a  slow  and 
painful  death,  will  be  looked  upon  years  hence  as  an  almost  incredible 
cruelty. 

RED  ACRE  FARM  AND  PINE  RIDGE 

We  act  as  agents  for  Red  Acre  Farm,  the  Home  for  Horses  at  Stow, 
and  inquiries  about  the  Farm,  and  how.  horses  can  be  sent  there,  will  be 
answered  at  any  time  by  letter  or  telephone.  Any  horse  which  is  a  subject 
for  charity  may  be  sent  to  the  Farm  by  anybody,  at  any  time,  without 

8 


notice;  and  the  animal  will  be  cared  for.  The  post-office  address  of  the 
Farm  is  South  Acton,  Mass.  The  railroad  station  is  South  Acton.  The 
telephone  is  West  Acton  8. 

Under  the  laws  of  Massachusetts  (Chap.  133  of  the  Acts  of  the  year 
1908)  cities  and  towns  may  turn  over  their  old  or  disabled  horses  to  Red 
Acre  Farm,  or  to  any  other  incorporated  society  for  the  relief  of  dumb 
animals.  Boston,  Somerville,  Brookline,  Waltham  and  other  municipalities 
have  availed  themselves  of  this  law,  instead  of  selling  the  animals  at  auction. 

Pine  Ridge,  the  annex  at  Dedham  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League,  is 
ready  at  any  time  to  receive  horses  that  need  rest  or  treatment.  Appli- 
cation should  be  made  to  the  League  at  51  Carver  Street,  Boston.  Pine 
Ridge  is  only  10  miles  out,  and  is  thus  a  convenient  place  in  which  to  give 
horses  a  vacation. 

OUR  RESOURCES 

This  Association  has  no  endowment  whatever,  and  although  our  offi- 
cers receive  no  compensation  for  their  services  and  our  rent  is  small,  we 
are  continually  hampered  by  lack  of  money.  Were  it  not,  indeed,  for  the 
generosity  of  a  few^  women  we  could  not  carry  on  the  Parade  or  the  Hos- 
pital. We  are  especially  indebted  to  Mrs.  David  Kevins,  Mrs.  R.  A. 
Lawrence,  and  Mrs.  B.  T.  Morrison. 

Wc  ask  for  assistance  from  those  who  love  horses  or  are  distressed  by 
their  sufferings. 

FAULTS  IN  STABLES 

Our  Inspectors  have  found  the  most  common  faults  in  Work-Horse 
stables  to  be  as  follows: — 

(1)  Scanty  bedding. 

(2)  Failure  to  bed  the  horses  on  Sundays  and  holidays  in  the  daytime. 

(3)  Failure  to  water  the  horses  at  night  after  they  have  eaten  their  hay. 

(4)  Failure  to  keep  the  horses'  feet  soft. 

(5)  Poor  grooming. 


The  Association  records  with  deep  regret  the  death  of  Dr.  F.  H. 
Osgood,  for  many  years  a  leading  veterinary  surgeon  in  this  state,  to  whom 
the  Association  was  greatly  indebted,  not  only  for  his  assistance  at  the 
Parade  in  a  difficult  capacity,  but  also  for  his  valuable  advice  always  freely 
and  kindly  given. 


STABLE  INSPECTION  REPORT 

The  following  is  a  copy  of  the  printed  form  for  the  Inspector's  report: — 
The  Inspectors  are  requested  to  report  on  the  following  matters  and 
any  others  that  may  occur  to  them: — 

1.  How  the  horses  are  brought  to  the  stable  by  the  drivers,  whether 
in  a  heated  condition  or  not. 

2.  Manners  and  appearance  of  the  horses,  as  showing  whether  they 
have  been  handled  kindly  or  roughly. 

3.  Bodily  condition  of  horses. 

4.  Condition  of  horses'  feet. 

5.  Shoeing. 

6.  Are  the  horses  well  groomed? 

7.  Examine  the  horses  for  galls  or  other  sores,  and  state  how  many, 
if  any,  are  galled. 

8.  Is  the  harness  clean  and  well  oiled;  and  especially  are  the  insides 
of  the  collars  clean? 

9.  Ventilation  of  stable  and  hay  loft. 

10.  Cleanliness  of  stable,  hay  loft  and  watering  troughs. 

11.  Drainage,  and  disposal  of  manure. 

12.  Temperature  of  stable,  and  whether  the  horses  are  subjected  to 
draughts  or  not. 

13.  Size  and  character  of  stalls — width  and  length. 

14.  Amount  of  bedding;  and  are  the  horses  bedded  during  the  day 
on  Sundays,  and  when  they  stand  in  the  stable  on  other  days? 

15.  Hours  of  feeding  and   watering;   and   especially  are   the   horses 
watered  after  eating  their  hay  at  night? 

16.  Quality  and  amount  of  hay  and  grain  fed. 

17.  Bran  mash, — when  given. 

18.  Salt,  when  and  how  given, 

19.  Blanketing  of  horses  in  stable. 

20.  (In  large  stables)  is  there  a  drying  room  for  blankets? 

21.  Are  there  rain-covers  for  the  horses,  or  two  sets  of  blankets — one 
for  wet  weather? 

Remarks:  


[])ate  Signature  of  Inspector. 

10 


POINTS  OF  A  GOOD  STABLE 

Horses  walked  on  starting  out  in  the 
morning,  and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Men  bring  the  horses  in  at  noon,  and 
at  night,  cool  and  breathing  easily. 

Legs  well  rubbed  if  wet  or  muddy,  or 
if  the  horses  are  tired. 

Head,  ears  and  neck  well  rubbed,  if  wet 
from  rain  or  sweat. 

Horses  sponged  under  collar,  saddle  and 
crupper. 

Horses  well  brushed  if  dry. 

Feet  washed  and  examined  for  nails. 

Eyes,  nose  and  dock  sponged  in  summer. 

In  very  hot  weather,  and  then  only, 
horses  wiped  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge 
on  coming  in.  (This  does  not  mean  washing 
the  horse,  much  less  turning  the  hose  on  him.) 

Horses  given  a  little  water,  but  not 
much,  on  coming  in  warm. 

No  grain  fed  for  at  least  an  hour. 

Horses  watered  when  cool,  then  hayed, 
watered  again,  and  grained.  (In  any  case, 
watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay.  This  is 
especially  necessary  in  summer.) 

Plenty  of  bedding,  and  horses  bedded 
down  all  day  Sunday. 

Hay  and  grain  of  the  best  quality. 

A  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday 
noon;  cool  in  summer,  hot  in  winter.  A 
mash  twice  a  week  if  work  is  light. 

A  lump  or  block  of  salt  always  within 
reach  of  the  horse. 

Hayloft  kept  clean. 

Harness,  especially  collars,  kept  clean. 

Wide  stalls. 

Easy  runway. 

Horses  tied  long,  so  that  they  can  lie 
with  heads  on  the  floor. 

Plenty  of  fresh  air,  but  no  draughts. 

No  fumes  from  manure  pit. 

Stalls  not  boarded  up,  but  open  or  grated 
in  the  upper  part. 

Drying-room  for  wet  blankets. 

Stable  quiet  at  night  and  on  Sundays. 

Horses  cleaned  Sunday  morning. 

Slatted  outside  doors  for  hot  weather. 

Stable  foreman  good  tempered,  not  a 
drinking  man,  and  able  to  keep  the  drivers 
up  to  the  mark. 

Comfortable  room,  with  a  bathtub,  for 
the  man  in  charge. 

Most  important  of  all — Horses  handled 
gently,  neither  struck,  nor  yelled  at,  nor 
sworn  at. 

Owner  drops  in  often. 


POINTS  OF  A  BAD  STABLE 

Horses  hurried  on  starting  in  the  morn- 
ing, and  after  the  noon  feed. 

Horses  brought  in  hot  and  breathing 
hard. 

Harness  stripped  off  roughly,  and  horses 
rushed  into  stalls  without  rubbing,  clean- 
ing or  sponging. 

Horses'  legs  washed. 

Horses  allowed  to  drink  their  fill,  no 
matter  how  hot ;  or  not  watered  at  all. 

Grain  fed  before  the  horses  are  rested. 

Feet  not  washed  or  examined  until  the 
horse  goes  lame. 

Horses  receive  no  water  after  eating 
their  hay,  until  next  morning. 

Scanty  bedding. 

No  bedding  on  Sundays  until  night,  and 
horses  watered  only  twice. 

Hay  and  grain  of  poor  quality. 

Bran  mash  not  given  —  too  much 
trouble. 

Horses  salted  only  when  somebody  hap- 
pens to  think  of  it. 

Hayloft  dusty  and  dirty. 

Harness  unclean  ;  sweat  allowed  to  ac- 
cumulate on  inside  of  collars. 

Narrow  stalls. 

Steep  runway,  with  narrow  turns. 

Horses  tied  short  for  fear  of  their  being 
cast,  as  is  likely  when  they  are  put  up 
dirty. 

Stable  close  —  no  ventilating  shaft. 

Windows  dirty. 

Manure  pit  ventilates  into  stable. 

Stalls  boarded  up  high,  where  the 
horses'  heads  are. 

Men  loafing  in  the  stable  in  the  even- 
ing and  on  Sunday. 

Horses  not  cleaned  on  Sunday. 

Windows  broken;  doors  left  open;  cold 
draughts  in  winter. 

No  slatted  outside  doors  for  hot 
nights. 

No  place  for  drying  wet  blankets. 

Uncomfortable  room  for  man  in  charge; 
no  bathtub.    • 

Stable  foreman  addicted  to  drink. 

Drivers  imitate  the  foreman. 

Worst  of  all — Horses  handled  roughly, 
knocked  about  ;  general  atmosphere  of 
noise  and  profanity. 

Owner  never  sees  the  horses  taken  out 
or  put  up,  nor  on  Sundays. 


11 


DRIVERS'  RULES 


2 
a  load. 


1.      Start   at   a   walk,  and  let  your  horse  work  very  easily  for  the  first  half   hour. 

A   heavy  draft  horse  should  never  be  driven  faster  than  a  walk,  with  or  without 


3.  Look  to  your  harness.      Avoid  these  faults  especially  : — 

Bridle  too  long  or  too  short. 

Blinders  pressing  on  the  eye  or   flapping.      (An   open   bridle  is   best   for  most 

horses.) 
Throat-latch  too  tight. 

Collar  too  tight  or  too  loose,  or  dirty  on  the  inside. 
Shaft-girth  too  loose. 
Traces  too  long. 

Breeching  too  low  down  or  too  loose. 
Inside  reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs. 

4.  Do  not  let  your  horse  drive  himself;  but  handle  the  reins  gently.  Never  jerk 
the  reins  ; — to  do  that  is  the  sure  mark  of  a  bad  driver. 

5.  Try  to  deliver  your  load  with  as  little  backing  as  possible.  Backing  a  heavy 
load  is  apt  to  strain  the  hind  legs. 

6.  Take  the  horse  out  of  the  shafts  as  much  as  possible  ;  and  if  you  drive  a  pair  or 
four,  unfasten  the  outside  traces  while  the  horses  are  standing  ;  they  will  rest  better  that  way. 

7.  Teach  your  horses  to  go  into  the  collar  gradually.  When  a  load  is  to  be  started, 
speak  to  the  horses  and  take  a  firm  hold  of  the  reins  so  that  they  will  arch  their  necks,  keep 
their  legs  under  them,  and  step  on  their  toes.  A  loose  rein  means  sprawling  and  slipping, 
often  with  one  horse  ahead  of  the  other. 

8.  Water  your  horse  as  often  as  possible.  Water  in  moderate  quantities  will  not 
hurt  him,  so  long  as  he  keeps  moving. 

9.  Blanket  your  horse  carefully  when  he  stands,  especially  if  he  is  at  all  hot. 
Repeated  slight  chills  stiffen  and  age  a   horse  before  his  time. 

10.  Bring  your  horse  in  cool  and  breathing  easily.  If  he  comes  in  hot,  he  will 
sweat  in  the  stable;  and,  also,  the  sudden  stoppage  of  hard  work  is  bad  for  his  feet. 

11.  In  hot  weather  or  in  drawing  heavy  loads,  watch  your  horse's  breathing.  If  he 
breathes  hard,  or  short  and  quick,  it  is  time  to  stop. 

12.  Remember  that  the  horse  is  the  most  nervous  of  all  animals,  and  that  little  things 
annoy  and  irritate  him.  Remember  that  he  will  be  contented  or  miserable  accordingly  as 
you  treat  him. 

12 


STABLE  RULES 


1.  The  best  order  in  feeding  is:  Water,  hay,  water  again,  grain. 

2.  Never  give  grain  to  a  tired  horse,  f^et  him  rest  and  nibble  hay  for  an  hour  or 
tw^o  first.      Grain  in  the  manger  before  the  horse  comes  in  looks  bad. 

3.  Water  the  horses  as  often  as  possible  ;  but  let  the  horse  that  comes  in  hot  drink 
a  few  swallows  only,  until  he  is  cool. 

4.  Always  water  the  horse  after  he  has  eaten  his  hay  at  night.  Do  not  go  to  bed 
leaving  him  thirsty  all  night. 

5.  Do  not  forget  to  salt  the  horse  once  a  week  ;  or,  better  yet,  keep  salt  always 
before  him.     He  knows  best  how  much  he  needs. 

6.  Give  a  bran  mash  Saturday  night  or  Sunday  noon  ;  and  on  Wednesday  night 
also,  if  work  is  slack.  After  a  long  day  in  very  cold  or  wet  weather,  a  hot  mash,  half  bran 
and  half  oats,  with  a  tablespoonful  of  ginger,  will  do  the  horse  good.  Put  very  little  salt,  if 
any,  in  the  mash. 

7.  If  the  horse  does  not  eat  well,  or  slobbers,  examine  his  teeth. 

8.  Keep  a  good,  deep,  dry  bed  under  the  horse  while  he  is  in  the  stable,  day  or 
night,  on  Sundays  especially.     The  more  he  lies  down,  the  longer  his  legs  and  feet  will  last. 

9.  In  order  to  do  well,  the  horse  must  be  kept  warm.  Give  him  a  blanket  on  cool 
nights  in  late  summer  or  early  fall,  and  an  extra  blanket  on  an  extra  cold  night  in  winter. 

10.  In  cold  rains  do  not  tie  up  the  horse's  tail.  The  long  tail  prevents  the  water 
from  running  down  the  inside  of  his  legs,  and  keeps  of?  a  current  of  air  from  his  belly. 

11.  Take  ofi  the  harness,  collar  and  all,  when  the  horse  comes  in  to  feed.  He  will 
rest  better  without  it. 

12.  Never  put  a  horse  up  dirty  or  muddy  for  the  night.  At  least  brush  his  legs  and 
belly,  and  straighten  his  hair. 

13.  In  hot  weather,  and  in  all  weathers  if  the  horse  is  hot,  sponge  his  eyes,  nose, 
dock,  the  harness  marks,  and  the  inside  of  his  hind-quarters  when  he  first  comes  in. 

14.  When  the  horse  comes  in  wet  with  rain,  first  scrape  him,  then  blanket  him,  and 
rub  his  head,  neck,  loins  and  legs.  If  the  weather  is  cold  put  on  an  extra  blanket  in  20 
minutes.  Change  the  wet  blanket  when  the  horse  dries.  DO  NOT  WASH  THE  LEGS. 
Rub  them  dry,  or  bandage  loosely  with  thick  bandages.  It  is  far  more  important  to  have 
the  legs  warm  and  dry  than  clean. 

15.  To  prevent  scratches,  dry  the  horse's  fetlocks  and  heels  when  he  comes  in,  espe- 
cially in  winter  ;  and  rub  on  a  little  glycerine  or  vaseline  before  he  goes  out  in  snow  or  mud. 

16.  Examine  the  horse's  feet  when  he  comes  in,  and  wash  them  if  he  does  not  wear 
pads.  If  a  horse  in  the  city  is  not  shod  in  front  with  pads,  tar  and  oakum,  which  is  the  best 
way,  it  is  absolutely  necessary  to  keep  his  feet  soft  by  packing  them,  or  by  wrapping  a  wet 
piece  of  old  blanket  or  carpet  around  the  foot,  or  by  applying  some  hoof  dressing  or  axle  oil, 
inside  and  out,  at  least  three  times  a  week. 

17.  Let  the  horse  have  a  chance  to  roll  as  often  as  possible  ;  it  will  rest  and  refresh 
him.  Give  him  a  little  clean  earth  or  a  piece  of  sod  to  eat  now  and  then  ;  he  craves  it,  and 
it  is  good  for  his  stomach  and  blood. 

18.  Speak  gently  to  the  horse,  and  do  not  swear  or  yell  at  him.  He  is  a  gentleman 
by  instinct,  and  should  be  treated  as  such.  The  stable  is  the  horse's  home,  and  it  is  your 
privilege  to  make  it  a  happy  one. 

N.  B.     It  is  very  important  that  stables  should  be  well  ventilated  ;   but  do  not  let  a  draft  blow  on  the 
horses.     Look  out  especially  for  horses  in  stalls  near  a  door. 

13 


HOT  WEATHER  RULES 


1.  Load  lightly,  and  drive  slowly. 

2.  Stop  in  the  shade  if  possible. 

3.  Water  your  horse  as  often  as  possible.  So  long  as  a  horse  is  working,  water  in 
moderate  quantities  will  not  hurt  him.  But  let  him  drink  only  a  few  swallows  if  he  is  going 
to  stand  still.     Do  not  fail  to  water  him  at  night  after  he  has  eaten  his  hay. 

4.  When  he  comes  in  after  work,  sponge  off  the  harness  marks  and  sweat,  his 
eyes,  his  nose  and  mouth,  and  the  dock.     Wash  his  feet  but  not  his  legs. 

5.  If  the  thermometer  is  75  degrees  or  higher,  wipe  him  all  over  with  a  wet  sponge. 
Use  vinegar  water  if  possible.     Do  not  turn  the  hose  on  him. 

6.  Saturday  night,  give  a  bran  mash,  cold  ;  and  add   a  tablespoonful  of  saltpetre. 

7.  Do  not  use  a  horse-hat,  unless  it  is  a  canopy-top  hat.  The  ordinary  bell-shaped 
hat  does  more  harm  than  good. 

8.  A  sponge  on  top  of  the  head,  or  even  a  cloth,  is  good  if  kept  wet.  If  dry  it  is 
worse  than  nothing. 

9.  If  the  horse  is  overcome  by  heat,  get  him  into  the  shade,  remove  harness  and 
bridle,  wash  out  his  mouth,  sponge  him  all  over,  shower  his  legs  and  give  him  four  ounces 
of  aromatic  spirits  of  ammonia,  or  two  ounces  of  sweet  spirits  of  nitre,  in  a  pint  of  water, 
or  give  him  a  pint  of  coffee  warm.  Cool  his  head  at  once,  using  cold  water,  or,  if  neces- 
sary, chopped  ice,  wrapped  in  a  cloth. 

10.  If  the  horse  is  off  his  feed,  try  him  with  two  quarts  of  oats  mixed  with  bran, 
and  a  little  water  ;  and  add  a  little  salt  or  sugar.  Or  give  him  oatmeal  gruel  or  barley 
water  to  drink. 

11.  Watch  your  horse.  If  he  stops  sweating  suddenly,  or  if  he  breathes  short  and 
quick,  or  if  his  ears  droop,  or  if  he  stands  with  his  legs  braced  sideways,  he  is  in  danger  of 
a  heat  or  sun  stroke  and  needs  attention  at  once. 

12.  If  it  is  so  hot  that  the  horse  sweats  in  the  stable  at  night,  tie  him  outside.  Un- 
less he  cools  off  during  the  night,  he  cannot  well  stand  the  next  day's  heat. 


14 


CATALOGUE 


TWELFTH  ANNUAL  PARADE,  1914 

NY  horse  that  is  dock-tailed,  sick,  lame,  thin,  galled,  out  of 
condition  or  wears  an  over-draw  check,  will  be  disqualified. 
Every  entry  not  disqualified  will  receive  a  ribbon, 
either  first  (blue),  second  (red),  or  third  (yellow).  In  the 
Old  Horse  Class  highly  commended  ribbons  are  awarded, 
which  are  equivalent  to  third  prizes  in  other  classes. 

Each  blue  ribbon  winner  will  receive  a  brass    medal 
to  be  worn  as  a  permanent  ornament  on  the  harness. 

There  is  no  restriction  upon  the  number  or  grade  of  ribbons  to  be 
awarded.  The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons  as  they  deem  to  be  de- 
served, subject  to  the  following  rules: 

(1)  Age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse. 

(2)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  green  horses, 
and,  if  possible,  riot  to  horses  who  have  worked  less  than  one  year. 

(3)  Blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  are  not  to  be  awarded  to  any  horse, 
unless,  allowing  for  the  imperfections  of  age,  he  is  a  horse  of  good  type 
and  good  quality.* 

MANNERS 

Manners  should  be  considered,  as  showing  whether  or  not  the  horse 
has  been  treated  kindly. 

COLOR 

The  color  of  a  horse  does  not  count, even  in  respect  to  matched  pairs. 

BLINDNESS 

A  blind  horse  is  not  disqualified. 

THE  VEHICLE 

The  vehicle  does  not  count,  except  that  a  vehicle  too  heavy  for  the 
horse  or  horses  drawing  it  should  either  disqualify  the  entry  or  reduce  the 
grade  of  ribbon  which  it  is  to  receive. 


*For  what  is  meant  by  quality,  see  the  pages  at  the  end  of  the  catalogue. 

15 


THE  HARNESS 

The  value  or  beauty  of  the  harness  does  not  count;  but  a  harness  that 
is  dirty,  too  heavy,  especially  in  the  bridle,  or  ill-fitting,  especially  in  the 
collar,  counts  against  the  entry. 

Many  a  good  horse  has  failed  to  receive  a  prize  in  former  years  by 
reason  of  his  collar  being  too  small  or  too  large,  or  for  some  other  defect  in 
the  harness.  Throat-latches  too  tight,  breeching  too  low  down,  and  inside 
reins  too  long,  in  the  case  of  pairs,  are  also  common  defects. 

Harness  that  is  light,  but  strong  enough  to  do  the  work  required  of  it, 
is  preferred  to  heavier  harness.  This  rule  will  be  observed  especially  in 
respect  to  bridles  and  other  parts  in  which  great  strength  is  not  required. 
Brass  frontlets,  unnecessary  rings,  tassels,  plumes  and  other  ornaments 
should  not  be  used. 

Housings  for  collars,  except  for  use  in  rain-storms,  are  strongly  dis- 
approved by  the  Association  as  being  unnecessary,  expensive  and  adding 
to  the  weight  of  the  harness. 

The  single  harness  approved  by  the  Association  weighs  only  53  pounds, 
collar  and  all,  and  it  is  big  enough  for  any  1350-pound  horse.  Horses 
of  that  weight  frequently  carry  a  harness  weighing  70  or  80  pounds.  The 
bridle  weighs  less  than  two  pounds — about  half  the  usual  weight. 


DRIVERS'  BADGES 

A  medal  or  badge,  to  be  worn  on  the  person,  will  be  given  to  every 
driver  who  shows  in  the  Parade,  in  good  condition  and  serviceably  sound, 
the  same  horse  or  horses  shown  by  him  in  the  Parade  of  the  year  before.  (In 
case  of  four-horse  teams,  it  will  be  sufficient  if  three  of  the  horses  were 
shown  by  him  the  previous  year.) 

A  gold  badge  will  be  given  to  the  most  meritorious  driver,  all  things 
considered ;  and  silver  badges  will  be  given  to  the  twenty  who  rank  next.  * 

It  is  believed  that  every  good  driver  in  Boston  will  be  ambitious  to 
obtain  one  of  these  badges,  and  that  possession  of  the  badge  will  be  the 
best  recommendation  that  a  driver  could  have. 


SPECIAL  PRIZES 

In    memory  of   R.   A.   Lawrence,   its  first   President,   the  Association 
offers  a  gold  medal  to  the  owner  and  a  silver  medal  to  the  driver,  for  the 


*The  following  gold  and  silver  badges  were  awarded  in  1913: 

Gold  Badges  to   M.  T.  Folger,  Christian  Lorenson. 

Silver  Badges  to  John  Arnold,  Robert  F.  Atwood,  Harry  F.  Baker,  Frank  Bellis,  Samuel  J.  Blair, 
John  Brown,  J.  L.  Callahan,  P.  J.  Daley,  Frank  Eiistis,  Bernard  Fox,  T.  J.  Harrington,  R.  E.  Harrington, 
Robert  Hezlitt,  Fred  Hitchcock,  George  F.  James,  William  Kenncy,  Oliver  Marion,  Henry  McGowan,  W 
F.  Meese,  John  A.  Morehouse,  J.  B.  Nealon,  Michael  O'Neil,  Clarence  Pleshaw,  Henry  Sheehan,  Louis  H. 
Steinberg,  Edward  J.  Sweeney,  John  J.  Tennihan,  F.  J.  Wilkins,  William  F.  Wilson. 

l(i 


1 


best  four-horse  team  in  the  Parade,  provided  also  that  the  driver   takes 
care  of  his  horses.     There  are  second  and  third  prizes  in  this  Class. 

Other  special  prizes,  consisting  of  gold  and  silver  medals  and  sums 
of  money,  are  offered  in  the  Veteran  Driver,  Old  Horse,  and  other  classes 
by  the  following:  Massachusetts  Society  for  the  Prevention  of  Cruelty 
to  Animals,  American  Humane  Education  Society,  Animal  Rescue  League, 
Red  Acre  Farm,  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington,  John  W.  Whitney,  W.  D. 
Quimby,  George  W.  Harrington,  F.  L.  Jordan,  James  Forgie's  Sons.  The 
M.  S.  P.  C.  A.  also  offers  money  prizes  for  the  drivers  of  the  best  four  and 
six  horse  teams  wearing  open  bridles. 


DRIVING  COMPETITION 

A  Driving  Competition  for  four-horse  and  six-horse  teams  will  be  held 
in  or  near  Commonwealth  Avenue  while  the  judging  is  taking  place. 
Entries  for  this  competition  need  not  be  made  beforehand.  The  first 
prize  will  be  a  silver  medal,  to  go  to  the  driver. 


U.  S.  MAIL   AND   LETTER   CARRIERS 

There  is  a  class  for  those  Letter  Carriers  in  the  Boston  District  who 
have  horses.  These  men  are  poorly  paid  by  the  Post  Office  Department, 
and  their  horses  make  a  poor  showing. 

There  is  also  this  year  a  class  for  Parcel  Post  horses.  These  horses, 
as  a  rule,  are,  throughout  the  whole  country,  a  disgrace  to  the  United  States 
government.  This  is  true  indeed  of  the  mail  horses  generally  in  the  United 
States.  The  regulations  of  the  Post  Office  Department  and  the  provisions 
in  the  mail  contracts  are  strict  enough,  but  the  officials  of  the  Department 
do  not  enforce  them.  A  really  humane  Postmaster  General  could  and  would 
change  all  this  in  a  month. 

In  Boston,  the  present  Mail  Contractor,  w^e  are  glad  to  say,  has  fine 
horses  and  keeps  them  in  the  best  condition ;  but  he  has  nothing  to  do  with 
the  Parcel  Post  horses  or  with  the  Letter  Carriers'  horses. 


NOTICE  TO  SPECTATORS 

In  many  cases  imperfections,  not  always  visible  to  spectators  at  the 
reviewing-stand,  very  properly  prohibit  the  giving  of  a  prize  or  a  ribbon 
of  high  grade  to  a  particular  horse.     The  horses  pass  the   reviewing-stand 

17 


at  a  walk,  and  at  that  gait  a  slight  lameness  would  not  be  disclosed, 
whereas  the  Judges  would  have  detected  it  when  the  horses  were  shown 
to  them  at  a  trot.  Moreover,  defects  in  harnessing,  sores  or  galls  under 
the  harness,  and  other  imperfections,  not  always  apparent,  frequently 
exclude  a  fine  horse,  or  team  of  horses,  from  high  honors.  It  should  be 
remembered,  too,  that  in  this  Exhibition  age  counts  in  favor  of  a  horse, 
and  that  green  horses  are  discriminated  against. 

SYSTEM  OF  JUDGING 

Those  classes  in  which  special  prizes  are  awarded,  namely.  Fire  De- 
partments, Old  Horses,  Reconstructed  Horses,  Four-Horse  Teams,  Owners' 
and  Foremen's  Runabout  Horses,  Barrel-Racks,  Hucksters,  Local  Expresses, 
and  the  five  Championship  classes,  are  judged  by  two  Judges  for  each 
class  who  inspect  the  horses,  and  see  them  move.  The  other  classes,  com- 
prising about  four-fifths  of  the  Parade,  are  judged  by  two  sets  of  Judges 
in  the  following  manner: — 

As  soon  as  the  classes  are  in  order,  they  start  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand,  wath  a  distance  of  twenty  feet  between  each  entry. 

Two  veterinarians  are  stationed  about  fifty  yards  down  the  line, 
and  the  horses  approach  them  at  a  slow  trot.  The  veterinarians  inspect 
the  horses  as  they  approach,  halt  them  if  necessary,  and  shunt  off  from 
the  line  any  that  are  lame. 

If  the  owner  or  driver  of  a  honse  thus  shunted  off  thinks  that  a  mis- 
take has  been  made,  he  may  ask  the  veterinarians  to  test  his  horse  again, 
and  in  that  case  the  veterinarians  will  give  the  horse  another  trial  later. 

Those  entries  not  excluded  for  lameness  proceed  at  a  walk,  and  are 
judged  by  two  experts  stationed  fifty  yards  further  toward  the  reviewing- 
stand.  They  "  size  up  "  the  horses  as  they  approach,  halt  them  for  a 
moment,  if  necessary,  and  look  them  over,  and  then  decide  on  the  grade  of 
ribbon  which  the  entry  is  to  receive, — or  decide  that  the  entry  is  to  receive 
nothing;  and  their  decision,  without  announcing  it  to  the  driver,  is  tele- 
phoned by  an  assistant  to  the  reviewing-stand.  Each  entry  carries  a  num- 
ber corresponding  with  the  number  in  the  catalogue,  so  that  this  can 
easily  be  done. 

This  plan  has  worked  successfully  for  three  years. 


18 


THE  NUMBER  OF  FIRMS   REPRESENTED  IN  THE  PARADE 


Year 

1914 

1913 

1912 

1911 

1910 

1909 

1908 

1907 

1906 

1905 

19<-)4 

1903 

563 

534 

453 

460 

357 

300 

258 

233 

181 

203 

174 

154 

TOTAL  NUMBER  OF  ENTRIES 


1914    1913    1912    1911 
1266    1210    1048    1015 


1907 

1906 

1905 

1904 

1903 

685 

593 

530 

444 

433 

PRIZES  AWARDED 


^ear 

1st 

2d 

3d 

4th 

5th 

H.C. 

Special 

Totals 

1913 

770 

239 

50 

25 

3 

1087 

1912 

601 

178 

53 

4 

9 

26 

2 

873 

1911 

454 

210 

82 

4 

7 

26 

56 

839 

1910 

499 

208 

91 

3 

17 

68 

866 

1909 

404 

197 

77 

7 

30 

83 

802 

1908 

362 

155 

70 

5 

23 

34 

655 

1907 

237 

147 

97 

59 

39 

43 

625 

1906 

165 

129 

94 

91 

24 

38 

543 

PRIZES  TO  VETERAN  DRIVERS 


1914 

1913 

1912 

1911 

1910    1909    1908 

1907 

1906 

29 

27 

29 

36 

38      37      19 
DRIVERS'  BADGES 

23 

24 

1914 

1913 

1912 

1911 

1910    1909    1908 

1907 

1906 

450 

315 

332 

327 

288     190     394 

505 

366 

19 


WILLIAM  D.  QUIMBY 


ARTHUR  GILBERT  MERWIN  DR.  P.  J.  CRONON 

W.  RODMAN  FAY 


Francis  Peabody 
Arthur  Perrin 
Joshua  Atwood,  3rd 
John  H.  Jewett 
James  I.  Brooks 

H.  J.  QuiMBY 

John  J.  Brady 
Dennis  Neyland 


William  J.  Brady 
William  Selby 
Robert  Mason 
Fred  L. Jordan 
John  W.  Whitney 
Howard  L.  Carpenter 
Benjamin  W,  Whitcomb 
J.  Waldron  Barnes 


©eterinarp  3n£^pector 

DR.  FRANK  J.  SULLIVAN 


Albert  B.  Lewis 
R.  D.  Carter 
Phillip  S.  Greeley 
George  Hicks 

F.  E.  Pooler 

G.  Burton  Milliman 
Francis  E.  Slater 


Robert  J.  Taylor 


lasjjers; 


A.  L.  Berry 


Jubges 


ALLIN,  H.  N. 
ARMSTRONG,  DR.  J.  M. 

BALKAM,  DR.  R.  W. 
BARNES,  DR.  W.  E. 
BARTLETT,  W.  R. 
BLACKWOOD,  DR.  THOMAS 
BOLGER,  DR.  D.  L. 
BRAY,  W.  C. 
BRIGHAM,  W.  E. 
BUNKER,  DR.  MADISON 

CLEAVES,  DR.  A.  S. 
COLDWELL,  E.  F. 
COLE,  W.  K. 
COLLINSON,  C.  M.  R. 
CULLEN,  DR.  DAVID 

DELANEY,  D.  J. 
DELANO,  DR.  CHARLES  W. 
DRAPER,  DR.  A.  \V. 
DUMMER,  R.  G. 

FENELON,  P.  C. 
FITCH,  DR.  A.  H. 

GILLIGAN,  J.  T. 
GORDON,  JOHN 


HARDING,  R.  W. 
HARRINGTON,  GEORGE  W. 
HARRISON,  CAPT.  RODEN 
HILL,  DR.  A.  G. 
HOLDEN,  C.  B. 
HUMPHREVILLE,  DR.  J.  F. 

KENNETT,  R.  A. 
KENNEY,  J.  R. 

LANGLAN,  THOMAS 

MACK,  THOMAS  VV. 
MACWILLIAMS,  P.  T. 
MARSHALL,  DR.  JAMES 
MASON,  ROBERT 
MASON,  T. 
MATTHEWS,  J.  B. 
MAXWELL,  GILBERT 
MAY,  DR.  A.  W. 
MCDONALD,  ARCHIE 
MCMANUS,  H.  P. 
MEREDITH,  JAMES 
MERWIN,  A.  G. 
MILLER,  CLIFFORD  G. 
MURRAY,  R.  H. 

20 


PEABODY,  FRANCIS 
PERRIN,  ARTHUR 
PERRY,  DR.  CHARLES  H. 
PFEIFFER,  DR.  MANUEL,  JR. 
PHILLIPS,  H.  O. 
PIERCE,  DR.  B.  D. 
.PIERCE,  DR.  H.  W. 

OUAIFE,  PROF.  E.  L. 

ROBINSON,  A.  G. 
ROBINSON,  J.  E. 
ROLLIN,  DR.  J.  H. 

SIBLEY,  DR.  R.  A. 
SOUTHER,  DR.  H.  A. 
STORY,  DR.  G.  F.  E. 
STUART,  GEORGE 
SULLIVAN,  DR.  F.  J. 
SULLIVAN,  J.  H. 
SWETT,  SCOTT 

W^ALKER,  FRED  F. 
WHITE,  DR.  W.  T. 
WHITTEMORE,  W.  P. 


THE  FOLLOWING  DRIVERS  ACT  AS  AIDS  IN  THEIR 
RESPECTIVE  CLASSES 


M.  J.  SHEA, 

CLAYTON  E.  EVERTON, 
EMIL  L.  RICHWACxEN, 
T.  J.  CRONIN, 
RICHARD  POWELL, 
JAMES  GAGAN, 
THOMAS  LONERGAN, 
WILLIAM  TALLENT, 
JOHN  W.  BOWKER, 
N.  L.  CLANCY, 
W.  P.  SEYMOUR, 
J.  F.  MURPHY, 
A.  B.  TORRENCE, 
FRANK  F.  CAPEN, 

PATRICK  E.  BURKE, 
ANTHONY  SYLVESTER, 
FRED  J.  WILKINS, 

FRANK  RIEMER, 

LOUIS  H.  BLAINE, 

GUILFORD  SAUNDERS, 

FREDERICK  L.  McCARTHY, 

HARRY  MARTELL, 

PATRICK  WELCH, 

DAVID  WALSH, 

THOMAS  CAMPBELL, 

DANIEL  A.  HERLIHY, 

M.J.  FREEMAN, 

GILBERT  H.  McWILLIAMS, 

FRED  L.  DAVIDSON, 

G.  FRED  SEAMON, 

MORRIS  J.  FLYNN, 

CHARLES  G.  VAUGHN, 

EDWARD  RICKER, 

WILLIAM  ARGY, 

R.  C.  HEZLETT, 
GEORGE  FARRELL, 
JOHN  F.  SHEA, 
EDW'ARD  D'STACIO, 
JOHN  TENNIHAN, 
FREDERICK  E.  WEIR, 
THOMAS  F.  BANNISTER, 
HERBERT  A.  LEA, 
LEO  LYNCH, 
ALFRED  HOYLE, 
W.  D.  HIGGINS, 
\V.  J.  COILEY, 
JOHN  J.  HARRINGTON, 
MARK  H.  SIMONDS, 


Deliveries,  Newspapers. 

Milk. 

Bakers. 

Laundries. 

Deliveries,  Miscellaneous. 

"  Department  Stores. 

Furniture  Makers  and  Movers. 
Provisions,  Light  Horses. 
Provisions,  Heavy  Horses. 
Confectioners. 
Grocers. 

Public  Service  Corporations. 

Manufacturers. 

Builders  and  Dealers  in  Building  Material. 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewers. 

Hay  and  Grain. 

Lumber. 

Ice. 

Contractors. 

Coke  and  Charcoal. 

Coal. 

Truckmen. 


Championship,  singles.  Light  Horses. 
Championship,  singles,  Middleweight  Horses. 
Championship,  singles.  Heavy  Horses. 
Championship,   doubles   and    upwards,    Heavy 

Horses. 
Championship,   doubles  and    upwards,    Heavy 

Horses. 
Old  Horses,  Division  A. 
Old  Horses,  Division  B. 
Old  Horses,  Division  C. 
Old  Horses,  Division  D. 
Old  Horses,  Division  E. 
Old  Horses,  Championship. 

Barrel  Racks. 

Express,  Division  A. 

Express,  Division  B. 

Express,  Division  C. 

Express,  Division  D. 

Hucksters,  Division  A. 

Hucksters,  Division  B. 

Hucksters,  Division  C. 


21 


VETERAN   DRIVER  CLASS 


The  American  Humane  Education  Society  offers  a  silver  medal  for  that  driver  in 
the  Parade  who  has  been  the  longest  continuous  time  in  the  service  of  his  present  employer 
or  of  the  predecessor  of  that  employer.  The  Association  gives  a  second  prize  of  five  dollars 
to  the  driver  with  the  second  longest  term,  and  a  bronze  medal  to  every  driver  entered  in 
this  class  (the  prize  winner  excepted)  whose  term  of  service  is  twenty  years  or  over. 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


WILLIAM  H.  CARTER 
JOSEPH  H.  DOHERTY 
JAMES  FENNER 
WILLIAM   F.   GALLAGHER 
THOMAS   H.   DONNELLY 
JOHN   B.    FAY 
GUILFORD   SAUNDERS 
ROBERT  C.   BEARD 
FRED   L.   DAVIDSON 
JOHN   F.   COFFEY 
TIMOTHY  J.   O'CONNOR 
JAMES   H.   COFFEY 
JAMES   SPIKES 
THOMAS  CLARK 
HENRY  DOHERTY 
MATTHEW   I.   NOLAN 
ROBERT   K.   PATTERSON 
NORRIS  W.   CURRIER 


Years  of 
Service 


Shapleigh  Coifee  Co.  21 

Doherty  &  Day  21 

H.  J.  Baird  21 

City  of  Boston,  Paving  Div.  21 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  22 

Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co.  23 

Fells  Ice  Co.  23 

Tide  Water  Oil  Co.  of  Mass.  24 

L.  A.  Waterhouse  24 
Public  Works  Dept.,  Suffolk  Co.      25 

Wilson  Tisdale  Co.  26 

Furbush  &  Co.  26 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co.  26 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co.  27 

Moulton  &  Holmes  27 

City  of  Boston,  Water  Div.  28 

Fox  Bakery  29 

Boston  Transfer  Co.  29 


22 


VETERAN  DRIVER  GLASS— Continued 


NAME  OF  DRIVER 


NAME  OF  EMPLOYER 


Yean  of 
Service 


CHARLES   S.   MOORE 
WILLIAM   F.   MEESE 
MICHAEL   BURKE 
JOHN   F.   CONNORS 
CLARENCE  JONES 
MORRIS  COCHRAN 
ANDREW   BLAKE 
PATRICK  A.   OUINN 
CHRISTIAN   LORENSON 
THOMAS  MURRAY 
JOHN   M.   BREWER 
SOLON  J.   RICHARDSON 
LOUIS   F.   BRIER 


Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  29 

L.  A.  Waterhouse  29 

City  of  Boston,  Water  Div.  30 

Stetson  Coal  Co.  30 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co.  30 

J.  G.  O'Riorden  35 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  35 

John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co.  36 

Jenness  &  Co.  36 

Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.  37 

Davis  Sand  Co.  40 

City  Laundry  Co.  40 

Jordan  Marsh  Co.  41 


The  Veteran  Driver's  Prize  was  won  in  1904  by  P.  Carney,  employed  by  the 
Metropolitan  Coal  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  30  years  ;  in  1905,  by  Thomas  Haley,  an 
employee  of  the  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber  Co.,  with  a  record  of  40  years  ;  and  a  medal  was 
also  given  to  P.  Callaghan,  employed  by  the  Newton  Cemetery  Corporation  for  38  years. 
In  1906  the  medal  was  won  by  Cornelius  Corcoran,  employed  by  W.  T.  &  A.  G.  Van 
Nostrand  Co.,  his  term  of  service  being  44  years  ;  in  1907  by  John  Francis  Kelley,  employed 
by  R.  O.  Brigham  for  42  years;  in  1908  by  Thomas  Colbert,  employed  by  Henry  Craft's 
Sons  and  by  James  Holland,  employed  by  P.  O'Riorden  Estate,  each  of  whom  received  a 
medal,  having  each  served  for  a  term  of  43  years.  A  special  silver  medal  was  also  awarded 
to  John  Green  for  his  service  of  49  years  with  the  City  of  Boston.  In  1909  this  prize  was 
won  by  John  M.  Lee,  of  the  Boston  Ice  Co.,  with  a  record  of  52  years'  service.  In  1910 
the  prize  went  to  Henry  Knox,  who  had  driven  37  years  for  the  George  McQuesten  Lum- 
ber Co.  In  1911  and  in  1912  the  medal  was  won  by  Louis  Brier,  driver  for  Jordan  Marsh 
Company,  with  a  term  of  service  of  38  years  and  39  years  respectively. 

In  1913,  Solon  J.  Richardson,  with  a  record  of  39  years'  employment  by  the  City 
Laundry  Company,  and  John  Brewer,  with  a  record  of  39  years'  employment  by  B.  J.  Healey, 
each  received  the  silver  medal. 

For  1914,  Thomas  Murray,  whose  term  of  service,  as  above  stated,  is  37  years' 
receives  the  silver  medal,  and  Richardson,  Brewer  and  Brier  receive  special  silver  medals. 

23 


S.    S.    PIERCE    CO.    DISTRIBUTERS 


Foster's  Bottling 


BUGLE  BRAND 

BASS  ALE 
GUINNESS  STOUT 


The   largest   bottlers   in    the  world  of 
Bass  Ale. 

The  best  and  most  careful    bottlers  of 
Guinness  Stout. 


tm m» 


24 


WTTT»»t»tm»> mnmm»»»t»»»»m»»>Mmn>> 


CLASSES 


CLASS  1— FIRE  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,    as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of       No.  of 
Ribbon        Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1  City  of  Boston  Charles  J.  Greeley 

Fire  Commissioner  Gradv  ! 


2  City  of  Boston 

Chemical  8 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

3  City  of  Boston 

Engine  25 

4  City  of  Boston 

Engine  39 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

5  City  of  Boston 

Ladder  3 


*John  M.  Devine 
i*Thomas  F.  Wren 
*John  J.  Ryan 

*Jeremiah  J.  Cronin 


Charlie 


Frank 
Major 

Nick 
Spike 

Tom 
Dick 
Harrv 


Hughie 

Dynamite 

Billie 


GLASS  2— POLICE  DEPARTMENTS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbon,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to    be 

deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


6  City  of  Melrose 

Chief  George  E.  Kerr 


"Allston  H.  Kineo 


CLASS  3— U.  S.  LETTER  CARRIERS 

The  Association  awards  a  special  prize  of  Three  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserves  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


William  George 


William  George 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


25 


XTRAVIM  FEED 


GUARANTEED 


PURE  PORTO  RICO  CANE  MOLASSES 
IN  DRY  FORM 


SOLD  IN  100=POUND 


f^^ 


Peep 


FOR 


By  our  new  proc- 
and  concentration, 
jectionable  feat- 
the  recognized 
lasses  as  a  food  for 

As  part  of  the 
highly  nutritious, 
ble  and  aids  diges- 
ergy,  and  develops 
sure  sign  of  perfect 

We  transport  our 
tation  in  Porto  Rico 
in  Boston  entirely 
omy  and  the  deliv- 
VIM  FEED  in 
ination  of  the  cost 
and  other  items  of 
brings  our  finished 
usually   [low    basis 

We  use  no  beet  residue. 

XTRAVIM   FEED  is   an  American  product,  without 
the  expense  of  ocean  freights  and  import  duty. 

We  will  appreciate  your  inquiries  for  literature,  samples  and  prices. 


t  HORSES,  CATTLE. 

g     SHEEP  AND  HODS 

IC  (NEW    PROCESS) 

Jtravim  molasses 

FEED  CO. 

26  BROAD  ST.       BOSTON 


BAGS 

ess  of  evaporation 
we  remove  the  ob- 
ures  and  retain  all 
\alue  of  cane  mo- 
horses. 

daily  ration  it  is 
extremely  palata- 
tion.  Produces  en- 
a  glossy  coat,  the 
health. 

molassesfrom  plan- 
toourstorage  tanks 
in  bulk.  Thisecon- 
eryof  ourXTRA- 
bags,with  theelim- 
of  barrels,  leakage 
waste  and  expense, 
product  to  an  un- 
of  cost. 


Xtravim  Molasses  Feed  Go. 

26  Broad  Street  Boston,  Mass, 


26 


CLASS  4-U.  S.  PARCEL  POST 

The  Associ-ation  awards  a  special  prize  of  Three  Dollars,  if  the  entry  deserxes  it. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


Michael  J.  Mulcahy 


Edward  J.  Mulcahy 


CLASS  5— U.  S.  MAIL  WAGONS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


J.  P.  O'Riorden 


11 

(This  horse 

12 

13 
]4 
15 
16 
17 
18 


William  J.  Leonard 
Daniel  F.  Welch 


Joseph  F.  Heuston. 

was  in  the  Parade  as  a  mail  wagon  horse  in  1908) 

'  "  Edward  J.  O'Connor 

"  Arthur  J.  Villemaire 

Thomas  Murray 
Charles  Barry 
Martin  Powers 
Daniel  O'Brien 
"  Hiram  Hankins 


CLASS  6^CITY  OF  BOSTON,  PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT 

MARE  AND  FOAL 

Special  ril;bcn  to  the  mare  and  foal. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


Mare's 
Name 


Foal's 
Name 


19         Street  Cleaning  Division 
Albany  Street 

(The  mare  purchased  June  28th,  1913.     Foaled  April  18th,  1914) 


Follie 


27 


*-'"• »..-. 


IF  OUR  HORSES  PLEASE  YOU 

•  •  •   A  JL  ^  •  •  • 

Our  Laundry  Work 


Telephone,  ROXBURY  283 


COLLECTIONS  MADE 

In  Breater  Boston,  Nantasfcet  anil  Coliassei 


CITY  LAUNDRY  CO. 

82  to  98  West  Lenox  Street 


28 


CLASS  7— OLD  HORSES 

Special  ribbons  if  the  horses  deserve  them. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


Sewer  Div.,  Back  Bay 
Pav.  Div.,  East  Boston 
Water  Div.,  Albany  Street 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Thomas  Hughes 

*William  F.  Gallagher 
Veteran  Driver 

James  Reed 


Horse's  Name 


Nigger 

Billie 

Bill 


Horse's 
Age 


23 
26 

28 


Year  8  of 
Service 


17 

20 
20 


CLASS  8— FOREMEN'S  DRIVING  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.   First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


23 

Sanitary  Div.,  Albany  Street 

James  J.  Sullivan 

1 

24 

James  Holloran 

1 

25 

<< 

J.  R.  Croizer 

1 

26 

Sewer  Division,  Albany  Street 

Patrick  Hartigan 

1 

CLASS  9-BRIDGE  DIVISION 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


27  Bridge  Div.  (South  Boston)  Jeremiah  Bresnahan 

28  "         "  "  "  John  Green 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


29 


»»«t«««t«»H«t««t««i»« 


i««i»ti««ti»iiiiimtititi»i»»««»m«« 


Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

20  Exchange  Place,  Boston 


Telephone,  MAIN  4640 


oO 


GLASS  10— PAVING  DIVISION 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


29 

Paving  Division,  Dorchester 

Timothy  Callahan 

30 

" 

*Thomas  Egan 

31 

South  End 

32 

"      -        "                "       " 

33 

Causeway  St. 

Patrick  Breen 

34 

Jamaica  Plain 

James  Murphy 

35 

" 

*Patrick  Murray 

2 

36 

Brighton 

Jeremiah  Connors 

2 

37 

Patrick  Collins 

1 

GLASS  11— STREET  GLEANING  DIVISION 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


38  Street  Cleaning  Div.,  Albany  St.      John  Kennedy 

39  "  "         "     No.GroveSt.  *Charles  Noone 

40  Albany  St.         John  Kirby 

41  ■'  "          '■     Roxbury  Div.*Charles  Bleiler 
41A          ■ "  *Joseph  Ward 

42  "  "         "     Albany  St.       *Stephen  Sawyer 

43  "  "         "           "         "         John  Killigrcw 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


31 


Pasteurization  in-the-Bottle 

THE  PERFECTION  OF  THE  ART  OF  MILK  HANDLING 

'T  IS  now  generally  recognized  by  milk  experts 
and  health  officials  that  pasteurization  is  imper- 
ative to  protect  milk  from  the  danger  of  the 
occasional  contamination  with  the  germs  of 
disease  which  may  take  place  in  spite  of  the 
exercise  of  the  highest  degree  of  care. 

The  following  described  brands  of  milk  we  are  enabled  to 
offer  pasteurized  under  the  recently  available  method  which  is 
the  perfection  of  the  art  of  milk  handling.  By  this 
method,  milk  is  pasteurized  after  it  is  placed  in  the  bottle, 
instead  of  in  bulk,  as  is  the  usual  practice.  Furthermore, 
under  this  method  bottles  are  capped  with  metal  crown  seals, 
which  give  a  sanitary  flush  covering  to  the  bottle  and  which 
make  impossible  the  opening  of  the  bottle  without  detection  by 
the  customer.  This  method  has  the  endorsement  of  eminent 
sanitarians.  These  brands  are  especially  recommended  for 
those  desiring  a  superior  milk  and  for  use  in  the  home  modifica- 
tion of  milk  in  infant  feeding : 

CROWN  BRAND 

From  selected  dairies  —  capped  with  metal  crown  seals  — 
pasteurized  in-the-bottle,  —  1  1  cents  per  quart. 

BLUE  LABEL  MILK 

From  very  high-grade  dairies  — from  tuberculin  tested 
cows  — capped  with  metal  crown  seals  —  pasteurized  in-the- 
bottle,  —  1  3  cents  per  quart. 

D.  WHITING  &  SONS 

570    RUTHERFORD  AVE..   BOSTON 


32 


CLASS  12    STREET  WATERING  AND  OILING  DIVISION 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No,  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


44         Street  Watering  and  Oiling  Div.     ^Patrick  Cronin 
Highland  Street 


CLASS  13- WATER  DIVISION 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


45      Water  Div.,  Albany  Street 

46 

47 

48 

49 

50 

51 

52 


*Michael  Ronan 
*David  Leo 

Michael  Mulkern 

Patrick  Coleman 

Thomas  McGill 

John  J.  O'Brien 

*Matthew  I.  Nolan,  Vet.  Driver 
*Michael  Burke,  Vet.  Driver 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


33 


«t«««»ttn>tiiitiiim»ti 


M.  H.  GLYNN  &  CO. 


GROCERS 

and 
IMPORTERS 


Hummerock  Rye  Whiskey. 

Purity  is  assured  by  Laboratory  tests. 

Satisfaction  in   knowing    that   you    are    drinking 
Pure  Whiskey. 

We  deliver  free  of  charge  within  a  radius  of  ten 

miles. 


366-370  Washington  Street 
BRIGHTON,  MASS. 


Telephone,  BRIGHTON  310 


CLASS  14-SEWER  SERVICE 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


N     of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

53     Sewer  Service,  Albany  Street 

Cornelius  Sullivan 

54 

*Thomas  Kennedy 

55         "           " 

Timothy  Reardon 

56 

Thomas  Casey 

57 

*Jeremiah  Sheehan 

58          "           "         Jamaica  Plain 

John  Graham 

59 

James  Rafferty 

CLASS  15-SANITARY  SERVICE,  ALBANY  STREET 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

60     Sanitary 

Service,  Albany  Street 

James  Maloney 

61 

. 

Thomas  Dolan 

62 

', 

John  Hennessy 

63 

' 

William  Dumphy 

64 

Roxbury  Div. 

William  Doherty 

65 

Albany  Street 

*Michael  Crimmins 

66 

' 

Patrick  Flaherty 

67 

, 

James  Dempsey 

68 

. 

*William  P.  Greevey 

69 

. 

*John  H.  O'Brien 

70 

. 

George  TuUy 

71 

" 

James  Callahan 

2 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


35 


NECCO  WAFERS 


Necco 

>SWEETS 


The   big   roll,  —  made    in    eight  flavors,  also    assorted. 
Hub  Wafers  are  similar,  but  with  a  transparent  wrapper. 


ON   SALE   EVERYWHERE 


MADE   BY 


New  England  Confectionery  Company 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


R.  A.  Kennett 


TRUCKMAN 

and 

FORWARDER 


3  John  Street,  Boston 

Telephone,  RICHMOND  30 


GLASS  16    SANITARY  SERVICE,  NORTH  GROVE  STREET 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVERS  NAME 

No.  of 
HorseB 

72 

San.  Service,  North  Grove 

Street 

*John  Holloran 

, 

73 

.. 

" 

*William  Moran 

1 

74 

" 

" 

*John  L.  Sullivan 

1 

75 

" 

" 

*Jeremiah  Mahoney 

1 

76 

^Joseph  Ryan 

' 

CLASS  17— PUBLIC  WORKS  DEPARTMENT,  SUFFOLK  COUNTY 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbon,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as   they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


77         Public  Works  Department 
Suffolk  County 


John  F.  Coffey 

Vet.  Driver 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


37 


r 


Salesman 

F.  OLIVO 

369  Douglas  Avenue 

PROVIDENCE,  R.  I. 


Salesman 
S.  LEONARDI 
Banca  Lepconi,  107  Common  St. 
LAWRENCE,  MASS. 


ANT.  BICCHIERI  &  CO. 


MANUFACTURERS     OF 


MACARONI 

Importers    and    Exporters 


68  PORTLAND  ST. 


CAMBRIDGEPORT,  MASS. 


Compliment 

of 
a  jFrienb 


38 


CLASS  18— FARMERS  AND  MARKET  GARDENERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


78     Warren  A.  Fillebrow  n 

George  D.  Hughes 

1 

79     Marston  Harding 

John  Nelson 

1 

80 

Fred  Perry 

2 

81 

Michael  O'Brion 

2 

82     John  J.  Lyons 

nVilliam  P.  Luddy 

1 

83     M.  E.  Moore 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Michael  Meany 

1 

CLASS  19-DELIVERIES,  NEWSPAPERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


84  Boston  American 

85  Wilson  Tisdale  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

86 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


(Fourth  Y( 


Harry  Cantor 


(Trick  Horse) 


(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

89 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Timothy  J.  O'Connor 

Vet.  Driver 

Bartholomew  Fitzgerald 

William  Aughny 

John  Daly 

Timothy  J.  O'Connor,  Jr. 


4intitle(l  to  Driver's  Badge 


3S» 


Pilgrim  Laundry 
Company 


65-79  Allerton  Street 
Boston,  Mass. 


Telephone,  ROXBURY  2880 


RED  ACRE  FARM 


The  Home  for  Horses 


IN^    STOW 

Twenty-five  miles  from   Boston 


Telephone,  West  Acton  8  Railroad  Station  and  Post  Office,  South  Acton 


Any  horse  may  be  sent  to  the  Farm  at  any  time,  with  or 
without  notice. 

Apply  for  information  at  the  office  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Relief  Association,  15  Beacon  Street,  Room  27. 


40 


CLASS  20-MILK 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

90     Albermarle  Farm 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Harold  A.  McAdoo 

91 

" 

Thomas  0.  Mcx^doo 

92     Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

Thomas  Menicantanti 

93 

J.J.  Corbett 

1/ 

94 

William  Main 

95 

William  Marcou 

96 

Thomas  Burke 

97 

Christopher  Devine 

98 

Harry  Marcou 

99 

William  Steadiford 

100 

Alex.  McNaught 

101 

Lee  Kellier 

2 

102     ( 

Z.  Brigham  Co. 

J.  B.  Kramer 

2 

103 

William  Plummer 

2 

104 

James  Akins 

2 

105 

Emerson  Hunt 

2 

106 

J.  H.  Rice 

2 

107 

(Third  Y 

•ar  in  Parade) 

J.  Hicks 

2 

108 

*Albert  E.  Andrews 

2 

i^Entitled  lo  Driver's  Badge 


4X 


TTON.  LOUIS  K.  ROURKE,  Commissioner  of 
•*■  •*•  Public  Works  for  the  City  of  Boston,  in  speaking 
of  the  Angell  Memorial,  said:  "The  individual  cup 
is  the  last  word  in  fountains  for  horses." 

Hundreds  of  veterinarians  all  over  the  world  say 
the  same  thing  about  the  Anti-Germ  Individual  Cup 
Fountains  for  Horses,  manufactured  by  the  H.  F, 
JENKS  CO.  (Inc.)  of  Pawtucket,  R.  I.,  U.  S.  A. 


ATWOOD  &  McMANUS 


Manufacturers  of  all  Kinds  of 


Wooden  Boxes 

Packing  Cases  and 

Kindling  Wood 


TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


Factory  and  Office: 

CARTER  and  FOURTH  STS.  CHELSEA,  MASSACHUSETTS 


CLASS  20-MILK  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

.                =: 

No.  of 
Horses 

109     C.  Brigham  C'o. 

Walter  Holden 

2 

110       " 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade  for  mare) 
(Second  Year  in  Parade  for  horse) 

*Morris  Millett 

2 

111           " 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade  for  one) 
(Second  Year  in  Parade  for  the  other) 

*Elmer  Peterson 

2 

'112      John  I.  Corkery 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*James  J.  Corkery 

113       "       " 

John  J.  Corkery 

114 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

^Patrick  J.  Murphy 

115     T.  E.  Coulter  &  Son 

Joseph  H.  Hanscom 

116     A.  Dan 

A.  Dan 

117     Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

William  McGinty 

118 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Edward  CahiU 

119 

*Henry  Dolan 

120 

*James  F.  O'Brien 

121 

*John  Simpson 

122 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

John  W.  O'Brien 

*Entitled  to  Driver'.-^  Badge 


43 


IF 


YOU  WANT  THE  BEST 
THAT  MONEY  CAN 
BUY  FOR  YOUR  HORSE 


USE 
BIBBY'S  HORSE  FEED 

No  additional  cost  of  feeding  but  a  better  ration. 
Aids  digestion,  prevents  colic,  expels  worms. 
The    best    thing    ever   yet    offered    to    horse    owners. 

COMPOSED  OF 
Decorticated   Cotton    Cake.    Undecorticated   Cotton   Cake,    Wheat   Middlings, 
Indian  Corn,  Decorticated  Pea  Nut  Cake,  Undecorticated  Pea  Nut  Cake.  Rice 
Polish.  Rape  Cake.  Molasses.  Soya  Bean  Cake.  Locust  Beans,  Salt.  Fenu|(reek. 


J.  LORINQ  &  CO. 

WATERTOWN,  MASS. 

IMPORTERS  AND  SOLE  AGENTS  FOR  NEW  ENGLAND 
Telephone.  NEWTON  NORTH  1008 


CATS  PAW 

CUSHION 

RUBBER  HEELS 

are  the  heels  for  you,  because 
they  ninke  walking  safe  as 
well  as  comfortable. 

Worn  reKnl;irlybytliMVis;iii(ls 
wholiav.'tri<-aotli.Tkiii(l<ti!st. 
50c.  attached.     All  dealers. 
Foster  Rubber  Co.,  Boston,  Mass. 


COMPLIMENTS 


THE 

PUREOXIA 
CO. 


44 


CLASS  20    MILK 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

123 
124 

125 

126 
127 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Henry  E.  Spinney 
Charles  H.  Colpitts 
James  Judge 
Charles  0.  Wilson 
Ralph  Armstrong 

128       

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Wllliam  Lord 

129       

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*  William  McGraw 

2 

130       

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Samuel  McKeeman 

2 

131 



Henry  McQuirk 

2 

132 

Eugene  W.  Forsyth 

2 

133     M.  Goldman 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Geo.  L.  Goldman 

1 

134 

McDonald-Weber  Co. 

Waldo  F.  Haskell 

1 

135 

Joseph  I.  Pingree 

2 

136 

Horace  A.  Prescott 

William  E.  Dempsey 

1 

137 

M.  Rubin  &  Sons 

Jacob  Rubin 

1 

138 

Somerset  Farms  Creamery 

John  A.  Carlson 

1 

139 

Frank  Haines 

1 

140 

Turner  Centre  Creamery 

Charles  E.  Wilson 

1 

141 

(Fourt 

1  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  C.  Martin 

1 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Bad^c 


45 


TURNER  CENTRE  DAIRYING  ASSOCIATION 

has  recently  purchased  the  building  located  at 

63*67*69  ENDICOTT  STREET,  CORNER  STILLMAN 

Manufacturers  of 

FINE  CREAMERY  BUTTER 

and  dealers  in 

SWEET  CREAM 

BOSTON,  MASS.  I.  L.  SMITH,  Manager 


William  Leavens  &  Co* 

FURNITURE    MANUFACTURERS 

32*34  CANAL  and  31*33  MERRIMAC  STS. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Near  Haymarket   Square  Telepfione,  Hay  market  J  54 

Eldridge,  Baker  Co. 

WHOLESALE  GROCERS 

213*215  STATE  ST.,  BOSTON,  MASSACHUSETTS 


Compliments  of 


THE  ATLANTIC  WORKS 


46 


GLASS  20 -MILK  (Continued 
DIVISION  B 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

142     Turner  Centre  Creamery 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*J.  Carroll 

1 

143             "       " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Dan  Desmond 

1 

144             "       " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

James  H.  Martin 

2 

145     J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 

Henry  Hubert 

1 

146     D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

Henry  L.  Fallon 

1 

147       " 

B.  H.  Fiske 

1 

148       " 

Clarence  R.  Pearl 

1 

149       " 

(SLxth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Charles  D.  Fletcher 

1 

150     D.  Whiting  &  Sons 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*George  Brown 

2 

151       "       "         "       " 

Joseph  Deitch 

2 

152       "       "         "       " 

Manning  A.  Miller 

2 

153       "       

Gus  Cardinell 

2 

154       "       "         "■     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade  for  fawn-colored  horse) 

*William  Wellington 

2 

155 

(Eleventh  Parade  for  white  horse) 
(Fourth  Parade  for  grey  mare) 

*Clayton  E.  Everton 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


47 


C.  BRIQHAM  CO. 

WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN 

ZHMlk,  Cream  anb   Butter 

158  Massachusetts  Avenue 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

Telephones    CAMBRIDGE  262  and  263 


Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

G.    L.    GOULDING,  Prop. 


—ESTABLISHED  1886— 


POPE   BUILDING 

Rooms  29-30-31 

221    Columbus   Avenue 

Telephone,    Tremont  381 


F.C.Warren&BradfordCo. 
Coal 

6  POST  OFFICE  SQUARE 
BOSTON 


M.  FREDIANI  &  SON 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

Fine   Confectionery 

AND  SALTED  NUTS 
326  Dudley  Street,  Roxbory 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

Distributers  of  Fine  Dairy  Products 

Pure    Family    and    Nursery    Milk.     The  "Ray 
Inspected    Milk.     Certified    Milk.      Modified 
Milk.       Bulgarian  Sour  Milk.       Butter- 
milk.    Heavy,  Medium  and 
Light  Cream 

Office  and  Storehouse  at 
WALES  PLACE,  DORCHESTER 

Off  247  Columbia  Road 


P.  O.  Address 
GROVE  HALL  STATION,  BOSTON,  MASS. 


48 


CLASS  21    BAKERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  0 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

156 

Henry  Blewett  & 

Sons                        Russell  Gardiner                                1 

157 

Cyrus  Gaudet                                     1 

158 

Ivory  Parrot t                                       1 

159 

Mike  McCormick                               1 

160 

Phillip  Perry                                        1 

;6i 

John  Wedge                                         1 

162 

Ferguson  Bakery 

(Gen.  Baking  Co.)  *Thomas  Hunt                                     2 

163 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

"   *  James  Powers                                      2 

164 

Fox  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.)       R.  I.  Lambert                                      1 

165 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

Charles  J.  Redalimo                          1 

166 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

"       *Robert  K.  Patterson, Vet. Driver    1 

167 

*Thomas  W.  Furey                              1 

168 

Arthur  W.  Gillespie                          2 

169     0.  B.  Oilman 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

^Robert  S.  Eaves                                  1 

170       "  " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade)     - 

*Emil  L.  Richwagen                             1 

171       "  " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Carl  0.  Tholander                             1 

172 

Wickham  &  Roe 

*William  T.  Messer                             1 

173 

*Norman  W.  Sias                                1 

174 

John  C.  Spaulding                              1 

175 

F.  L.  Ralston                                     1 

176 

*Irving  C.  Burpee                                 1 

177 

Mark  H.  Knowles                               1 

178 

*Patrick  H.  Schrage                            1 

179 

William  G.  Boyce                               1 

49 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


COLEMAN  BROTHERS 
General   Contractors 


BOSTON 


< 

Sole  Partner  JQHN   F.   COLEMAN 


Shattuck  &  Jones 

INCORPORATED 

"^A^^  ""^       ^"£?"'Ji^j^Ba  OYSTERS 
KINDS  ^^^W        CLAMS 

128    FANEUIL    HALL    MARKET 

BOSTON,   MASS. 


Compliments^ 

of 

S  jFrienb 


50 


CLASS  22-LAUNDRIES 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


180    Beacon  Laundry 

181 

182 

183 

184 

185 

186 

187 

188 

189 

190    City  Laundry  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


191 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

192 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

193 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

194 

(Fourth  Year  in  Paradel 

195 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

196 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


197 
198 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


Angus  J.  McClellan 

Eugene  T.  Freeman. 
*Edward  M.  Stearns,  Jr. 

Walter  Twist 

Frank  Williams 
*John  Passalacque 

Edward  H.  Newton 

Daniel  Warren 
*Charles  W.  Schofield 

Thomas  F.  Reardon 

Geo.  W.  Ring 

*James  P.  O'Brien 
Henry  K.  Barnard 

*A.  C.  Burr 
George  Reveau 

*T.  J.  Cronin 

Oscar  S.  Day 

*Robert  Moore 
J.  E.  Halderried 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


51 


THE 


Roessle  Brewery 


PREMIUM  LAGER  BEER 

IN  WOOD  OR  BOTTLES 

MATURED  IN  THE  OLD  WAY  AND  OVER  FOUR  MONTHS  OLD 

Is  the  Highest  Type  of  Honesty  and  Excellence,  considering  Quality 
Age,    Substance,    Purity    and    Aroma,    and    is    Absolute  Perfection 

ESTABLISHED  1846 


OFFICE,  BREWERY  AND  BOTTLING  DEPARTMENT 

1250  COLUMBUS  AVENUE  BOSTON,  MASS. 


134-138  Pleasant  Street,  Maiden  Central  Square,  East  Boston 

J.  Caldwell  &  Co. 

Complete  ^ousfe  Jf urntsifjers! 


CASH  OR  LIBERAL  TERMS 


Furniture,  Piano  Moving  and  Storage 


55  Union  Square,  Somerville  155  Market  Street,  Lynn 


CLASS  22 -LAUNDRIES  (Continued 


Ilo.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  o{ 

Horses 


199  City  Laundry  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

200  Dalton  Hand  Laundry 

201  Dorchester  Custom  Laundr>' 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

202  Empire  Coat  &  Linen  Supply  Co. 


203 

(Third  Year  in 

Parade) 

204     Arthi 

Lir  J.  Hickey 

205     D.J. 

Keleher 

206     Pilgr 

m  Laundry  Co. 

207 

-. 

208 

" 

209 

.. 

210 

211 

212 

213 

214 

215 

.. 

Alfred  Hilton 

nV.  G.  Kiniry 
Edward  A.  Wellinder 

*William  L.  Snow 
*Eugene  A.  Stinson 

William  Hickey 
John  J.  Moynihan 
George  H.  Whicher 
Robert  S.  Stadtman 
John  C.  Higgins 
Edward  F.  Dardis 
Joseph  V.  Cummings 

*  Joseph  P.  Curry 
Harold  W.  Jennings 

*Daniel  J.  Cochran 
Willard  W.  Murray 
Williams  C.  Berghaus 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


53 


Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday  Horses  at  Private  Sale  and 

and  Saturday  at    10  A.M.  Exchange  every  day 

HENRY  S.  HARRIS'  SONS 

SAMUEL  C.  HARRIS,  Prop. 

North  Union  Horse  Exchange 

197  FRIEND   STREET 

and 

38  TRAVERSE  STREET 

N.  B.    A  Line  of  Harness,  Horse  Clothing  and  Turf  Goods  at  Store  1  3  1  Portland  Street 
Telephone,  HAYMARKET  984 


TREMONT  CO-OPERATIVE  MARKET 

557  TREMONT  STREET,  BOSTON 

Respectfully  solicits  your  trade  Telephone  orders  carefully  attended 

Telephone,  Tremont  479  Telephone,  Tremont  233 

OPERATED  BY  THE  NEW  ENGLAND  CO-OPERATIVE  SOCIETY 

R.   H.   SNIDER.   Manager 


D.  S.  WOODBERRY  R.  S.  WOODBERRY 


ESTABLISHLD  1841 


D.  s.  WOODBERRY  &  CO.      W.  P.  STONE  &  DOniPflNY 

I  Manufacturers  of 

FORWARDERS  \      Wagons,   Caravans  and  Sleds 

Carriage  Painting 

247  ATLANTIC  AVENUE  Room  41      j  REPAIRING  IN  ALL  BRANCHES 

P.  O.  Box  1284  Telephone,  MAIN  4519        I 


BOSTON,  MASS. 


175  and  179  West  First  Street 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


54 


CLASS  23-DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


216  Banca  Stabile  &  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

217  Walter  W.  Blanchard 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

218  J.  J.  Blute 

219  Boston  Parcel  Delivery  Co. 
220 

221 

222  H.  &  L.  Chase 

223  Harry  Cohen 

224  George  L.  Cushing 

225  Israel  Dane 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

226  Oliver  Ditson  Co. 

227  John  Donnelly  &  Sons 

228  "  "         "     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

229  Dorchester  Pottery  Works 
230 

231 

232  Hugh  J.  Dorsey 

233  James  Forgie's  Sons 

234  Godesti-Fanara  Co.,  Inc. 

235  William  B.  Hammond 

236  The  Kelly  Peanut  Co. 

237         

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

238  "       "  "       " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Antonino  Tamagna 
Walter  W.  Blanchard 
J.  J-  Blute 
John  F.  Hurley 
Ralph  Bevens 
Edward  Coughlin 
*Fred  J.  Reid 
Harry  Cohen 
George  L.  Cushing 
*Samuel  I.  Miller 
Parker  J.  Murphy 
Amos  B.  Christie 
*John  E.  Lyons 
Charles  W.  Henderson 
William  Plunkett 
Arthur  B.  Doughty 
Hugh  J.  Dorsey 
James  T.  Forgie 
C.  Godesti 
♦William  Malloy 
John  M.  Sullivan 
*Louis  Fiorentino 
♦Richard  Powell 


No.  of 
Horses 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


55 


PRINTING  THAT  ATTRACTS,— THE  KIND  THAT  POSSESSES 
CHARACTER  AND  DRAWING  POWER  —  THE  KIND  THAT 
BRIDGES  THE  CHASM  WHICH  SEPARATES  THE  BUYER  AND 
SELLER— THE  KIND  THAT  NEVER  FINDS  ITS  WAY  TO  THE 
WASTE  BASKET  TILL  WORN  OUT  FROM  CONSTANT  HANDLING  — 
THAT  IS  THE  "WOODBERRY"  KIND,  WHICH,  WITH  THE  "WOOD- 
BERRY"  PROMPT  SERVICE,  IS  VALUED  AND  APPRECIATED  BY 
MANY  SATISFIED  CUSTOMERS.     WHY  NOT  BECOME  ONE  OF  THEM? 


^  ,     ,  (  Garage,  CAMBRIDGE  5470 

lelephones.;  Service  Station,  CAMBRIDGE  25233 


MYER  ABRAMS  CO. 

NEW  ENGLAND  DISTRIBUTERS 

Lauth-Juergens  Motor 
Trucks 

Made  in  1-2-3-5  Ton  Sizes 


LIBERAL  TERMS  GIVEN 


159  VASSAR  STREET,  CAMBRIDGE 


CLASS  23— DELIVERIES,  MISCELLANEOUS  (Continued) 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


239  M.  A.  Langenthal 

240  John  Leech 

241  R.  Marston  &  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

242  " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

243  Joseph  G.  O'Riorden 

244  "       " 

245  William  H.  Paine 

246  William  H.  H.  Parcher 

247  Plakias  Lunch  Co. 

248  Rees  &  Rees 

249  George  W.  Reid 

250  Frank  Ridlon 

251  A.  P.  Rockwood 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

252  L  Smith 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

253  Herman  Strater  Co. 

254  Trask  Heating  Co. 

255  Union  Shrinking  Works 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

256  H.  K.  Wampole  &  Co.,  Inc. 

257  Walton  Lunch  Co. 
258 

259     H.  A.  Wheeler  &  Co. 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


M.  A.  Langenthal 
John  Leech 
*Raymond  Valiquet 

*Galen  F.  Spinney 

James  Doherty 
Thomas  Donahue 
William  H.  Paine 
John  F.  O'Neill 

*Steven  S.  Stauropulos 

*Richard  F.  Ronayne 
John  Fitzgerald 
Timothy  J.  Dwyer 

*Martin  J.  Culliton 

Benjamin  Smith 

Edward  J.  Thomas 
Robert  J.  Moran 
Arthur  M.  O'Brien 

Francis  Barry 
Peter  Brown 
Arthur  E.  Andrian 
Albert  E.  Collyer 


No.  of 
Horses 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


.57 


.ygi^. 


HealAfu!  V 


C  F.  EDDY 
COMPANY 

Coal 
Dealers 

West  Newton,  Mass. 

Telephone,    Newton  West  91 


OFnCES  AT 

Newton,  Newtonville,  Waltham,  West 
Newton  and  Aubumdale 


17    MKRCIIAXTS    ROW 

BOSTON.  MA.SS 


For  over  45  years  we  have  been  makers  of 

GOOD  HARNESS  and  COLLARS 

Don't  forget  the  new  location,  17  Merchants  Row 


■jtr^-jj-jf^ 


o8 


CL.\SS  24-DELnXRIE.S. 

The  Judges  mar  award  such  ribbons, 


DEPARTMENT  STORES 

pjst.  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 


fc».«f 


OW^SJrS  KAME 


tMOVESrSHAME 


260    W.  &  ,A  Bacon  Co. 

Edward  De\-in 

261       

John  Adams 

262 

Thomas  Hill 

263 

James  Hanle>- 

3f>4 

Ridiard  Scannell 

265    F. -V  Joslin  &  Co. 

J-F.  Hacket 

266    Jordan  Mai^h  Co. 

•Tinrf  Year  ix  Paraat, 

\MlHam  Griffin 

267 

"lairc  Year  ^r  i-ici-j^ 

John  Kroger 

26%           

S-raciY^ariaPSttaae, 

Frank  McGovem 

269           

*Le»j  >Iedui 

270 

Patrick  Lyons 

271 

T»a3!i  Year  ^  I'sarasiej 

Louis  F.  Brier.  Vet.  Driver 

273  

274  

27.5     Le\-in'5  De^jartment  Store 


*James  Gagan 
Albert  Hennessey 
*Thomas  J,  Lonexigaii 
♦David  Gtick 


•Entitiec 


Ba-lf*: 


C.  BOWEN 

Mover  of 

SAFES  AND  MACHINERY 
General  Truckman 

SAFES  AND  MACHINERY  STORED 

44  Sudbury  St.  and  2  Bowker  St. 
BOSTON.  MASS. 

C.  F.  BOWEN  J.  E.  BOWEN 

Telephone  Connection 


E.  B.  MULDOWN 


J.  B.  O'BRIEN 


The  Hub  Shoeing  Forge 

241  STATE  STREET 

(Near  Atlantic  Avenue) 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


Telephone  Connection 
PARTICULAR  ATTENTION  PAID  NEVER-SLIP  SHOEING 


City  Fuel  Company 
COAL 

Main  Office,  18  POST  OFFICE  SQ. 

Tel.,  FORT  HILL  4470 


AMERICAN    COAL 
COMPANY 

376    ALBANY    STREET 
BOSTON 

Telephone.  TREMONT  335 


Compliments  of 

Ralph  Harris  &  Company 

26   BROMFIELD  ST. 
BOSTON 


CLASS  25— FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,  First,   Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

276     E.  T.  Beck 

Henry  J.  Winn 

2 

277     Bloomberg  Bros. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*N.  Fisher 

1 

278     Jackson  Caldwell  &  Co. 

Joseph  H.  Yeaker 

2 

279     Carder  Wood  Working  Co. 

Oscar  Douglas 

2 

280     L.  M.  Coleman 

L.  M.  Coleman 

281     Edward  Courtney 

*James  T.  Courtney 

282     J.  M.  Douglass 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Morris  Robbins 

283     Alger  E.  Eaton 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

nVilliam  B.  Colter 

284     Eraser  &  Walker 

Henry  Pero 

285     M.  Freed  man  &  Co. 

C.  A.  Loud 

286     Isaac  Goodman 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Isaac  Goodman 

287     James  F.  Grady 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

James  F.  Grady 

288     William  Qreene 

Thomas  Canada 

289     Hayes  &  Hickey 

Frank  J.  Lynch 

290     James  G.  Haynes  Estate 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*James  F.  Brennan 

291     Highland  Furniture  Co. 

I.  Sriberg 

292     Samuel  H.  Jacobson 

Samuel  H.  Jacobson 

293     George  T.  Jaques 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Henry  Rose 

294     Valdemar  0.  Kalberg 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Archie  F.  Haggle 

295     Hyman  Kruger 

Edward  Conlen 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


61 


BAKER'S 
COCOA 

Is  Good  Cocoa 

Of  fine  quality, 
made  from  care- 
fully selected  high- 
grade  cocoa  beans, 
skilfully  blended, 
prepared  by  a 
perfect  mechanical 
process,  without 
the  use  of  chemi- 
cals or  dyes.  It 
contains  no  added 
potash,  possesses  a  delicious  natural 
flavor,  and  is  of  great  food  value. 

Walter  Baker  £?  Co.  Ltd. 


TUB  Barry 
Building  WrecKing 

BUILDINGS  Do'w;; 


Dealer  in 

All  Kinds  of  Second-Hand 
Building  Material 

NEW  AND  SECOND-HAND  PLUMBING 


Office  and  Yard; 


326  Dorchester  Ave.,  South  Boston 


Telephone,  SOUTH  BOSTON  378-M 


Telephone,  Roxbury  471 


Telephone,  Charlestown  460 


GREENE  BROS.  &  CO. 

Carriage  and  Wagon  Manufacturers 
Also  Builders  of  Truck  Bodies  and  Wheels 

ALL  KINDS  OF  REPAIRING  NEATLY  DONE 

FIRST-CLASS  WORK  SATISFACTION  GUARANTEED 

WAGONS  CALLED  FOR  AND  DELIVERED 

Junction  of  Massachusetts  Avenue  and  Southampton  Street 

BRANCH  REPAIR  SHOP 

404-411  RUTHERFORD  AVENUE,  CHARLESTOWN 

Telephone.  Main  1767  COfUplmeilfS   Of 

A.  A  Rowe  &  Son  Co.      j.  h.  Richardson 

torwarding  Agents 

AND 

Bonded     Truckmen 

CUSTOM  HOUSE  BROKERS 

32    INDIA   WHARF,     BOSTON 


Established  1869 


Incorporated  1910 


COSMOPOLITAN    BOARDING 
and  BAITING  STABLE 

Corner  PITTS  AND  SOUTH    MARGIN  STS. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

STOCK  FARM:  ANDOVER,  MASS. 


62 


CLASS  25    FURNITURE  MAKERS  AND  MOVERS  (Continued) 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


296     W  illiam  Leavers  &  Co 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


297 

298 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

299 

300 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

301 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

302 

D. 

Levenson 

303 

A. 

Lowenstein  Sons 

304 

Carmelo  Mirabile 

305 

306 

.. 

307     Filippo  Rotondo 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

308 

" 

309 

-, 

310 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

311 


312     Suffolk  Furniture  Co. 


*John  J.  Ca\anaugh 

\\' illiam  H.  Loveless 
*Walter  E.  Gallagher 

*William  Tallent 
John  W.  Dinsmore 

Anthony  J.  Gaudette 

Samuel  Glick 
Abram  Dashoff 
Rocco  Romano 
Albert  Sarni 
C.  Mirabile 
Sam  Coleman 

Michael  Morandi 
Frank  Rotondo 
*P.  A.  Coombs 

Michael  Stacio 
Thomas  McGee 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


63 


Jordan  Marsh  Company 

NEW  ENGLAND'S    LARGEST  AND   MOST 
PROGRESSIVE  RETAIL  ESTABLISHMENT 


A  Distinctively  Good  and  Reliable  Store 

— /;/  the  High  ^ality  of  its  Merchandise 

— In  the  Rxcellence  of  its  Service 

— ///  its  Steadfast  Policy  of  Fair  Dealing 


TWO  GREAT  BUILDINGS 

OVER  1,000,000  SQUARE   FEET  OF  FLOOR  SPACE 

169  SEPARATE  SELLING  SECTIONS 


Telephone,  HAYMARKET  1380 


L.H.  BROCKWAY 
..Sale  Stable.. 

DRAFT  HORSES,  CHUNKS  AND  DRIVERS 

FRESH  FROM  THE  COUNTRY  EVERY  WEEK 


Satisfaction  Guaranteed.     All  Horses  Warranted  as  Represented,  but  not  against  Sickness 


153  Portland  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


64 


CLASS  26— PROVISIONS 

LIGHT  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


313  Sal va tore  Andolino 

314 

315 

316  Benson  Bros. 

(Four;h  Year  i.i  Parade) 

317  Boston  Transfer  Co. 

318  J.  D.  Brennan 

(SLxth  Year  in  Parade) 

319  Brighton  Public  Market 
320 

321 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

322  Guy  C.  H.  Carlton 

323  B.  S.  Cole 

324  B.  A.  Freeman 

325  Harry's  Market 
326 

327  C.  C.  Lacerda  &  Son 

328  Nathan  J.  Phillips 

329  Charles  L.  Pratt 

330  W.  A.  Ray 

331  "     "     " 


Herbert  E.  Coombs 
*Tony  Casadoni 
*Redner  P.  Coombs 
^Bernard  Dennison 

Norris  W.  Currier,  Vet.  Driver 
^Cornelius  Harrington 

*William  L.  Mulvaney 
James  J.  McDevitt 
*William  A.  Dorr 

John  Guerry 
James  Y.  Fleming 
M.  J.  Lannon 
Robert  Kaplan 
Hugh  Wallace 
Thomas  P.  Cooney 
Nathan  J.  Phillips 
Carl  H.  MacLean 
Frederick  A.  Randall 
Walter  Catchpole 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


65 


You  Are  Invited  To 
Visit  Our  Laundry 


OUR  doors  are  always  open  to  the  public  for  the 
inspection  of  our  plant  and  methods.  If  you  have 
never  been  inside  a  modern  laundry,  a  few  moments  of 
your  spare  time  spent  with  us  will  be  interesting  to  you 


TAYLOR  BROTHERS  LAUNDRY 

10=16  Davenport  Avenue 
UPHAM'S  CORNER         -         -         DORCHESTER 


DRAKES;^ 


CAKE 


ASK  YOUR  GROCER. 
VISIT  OUR  BAKERY. 

Drake 

Brothers 

Company 

85  Savin  Street,  Roxbury 


ESTABLISHED  1841 


E.  B.   BADGER 
&  SONS  CO. 


o*  c*  ^ 

Coppersmitbs  and 
sua  metal  (Uorkers 

J6         J6         ^ 

Nos.  63  to  75  PITTS  STREET 
BOSTON 


(56 


CLASS  26-PROVISIONS  (Continued) 
LIGHT  HORSES 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


332  E.  A.  Rich  Co. 

333  Louis  Rosenberg 

334  Joe  Sacco 

335  Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

336  "  

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

337  Tremont  Co-Operative  Market 
338 

339 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

340  J.  P.  Sweeney 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

341  S.  B.  Walter 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

342  J.  &  D.  M.  White 


Arthur  N.  O'Rourke 
Louis  Rosenberg 
Joe  Sacco 
John  W.  Bowker 
*Morris  E.  Marder 

William  York 
*  Walter  Nickerson 
Ruben  Garfield 

*Thomas  Melly 

M.  Walter 

J.  E.  Wallace 


No.  of 

Horses 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


DEERFOOT  FARMS,  at  Southboro,  Mass. 

Boston  Store  New  York  Stoie 

9  BOSWORTH  STREET  172  CHAMBERS  STREET 


DEERFOOT" — 

SAUSAGE  SALT  PORK  MILK 

SAUSAGE  MEAT  BACON  CREAM 

FRESH  PORK  LARD  BUTTER 
EGGS           BUTTERMILK 


TELEPHONES,  FORT  HILL  4467  and  4468 


Compliments  of 


Timberlake  &  Small 

3mporterg  anb  (Srocerg 
Neponset,  Mass. 


Compliments  of 


Hotel  Bellevue 

Beacon  Street,  Boston 


TO  SA  VE  TIME  is  to  lengthen  life 

No  up-to-date   housekeeper   uses  wood    nowadays   to    kindle   a   fire. 

The  Standard  Charcoal  Co.'s  hardwood  charcoal,  put  up  in  clean, 
tight  paper  bags,  is  cheaper,  safer  and  more  economical  than  wood  and  gives 
you  a  hot,  glowing  fire  a  few  seconds  after  lighting. 

For  sale  by  all  good  grocers  everywhere.  Sold  also  in  bulk  to 
foundries,  manufacturing  plants,  hotels,  restaurants   and    business   houses   by 

STANDARD  CHARCOAL  CO.,  "^iJ^^RViLlF 

TELEPHONE,  SOMERVILLE  80 
LOOK  FOR  THE  NAME,  "STANDARD  CHARCOAL,"  AND  ACCEPT  NO  SUBSTITUTE 

68 


CLASS  27— PROVISIONS 

HEAVY  HORSES 

The  Judges   may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

343     A.  Bicchieri  &  Co.                            *Nunzio  Bicchieri 

(Third  Year  in  Parade.     For  care  and  attention  of  this  horse,  driver  presented  with  blanket  by  owners) 

1 

344     Caruso  Brothers 

*Peter  Caruso 

1 

345 

*Joseph  McConologue 

t 

346     Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

Joseph  H.  Cassell 

1 

347           "         "     " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*P.  J.  Shaughnessey 

? 

348 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Henry  J.  McCarthy 

2 

349           "         "     '• 

*David  McGill 

2 

350     Furbush  &  Co.,  Inc. 

*James  H.  Coffey,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

351           "         "       "     " 

*N.  L.  Clancy 

2 

352     Handschumacher  &  Co. 

William  A.  Bolster 

1 

353     N.  Maggioli 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Joseph  Guardino 

1 

354     McKinnon  &  McKenzie  Co. 

Joseph  G.  Ralston 

1 

355     John  Reardon  &  Sons  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Patrick  A.  Quinn,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

356     Snow  &  Parker 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Eben  R.  Austin 

1 

357     Sprague  Bros. 

*Edward  Vial 

1 

358     Rudolph  Wismer 

Rudolph  Wismer 

1 

359     John  Wright 

John  Wright 

2 

•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


69 


K  WARD  COMPANY 

I  Street,  Corner  First  Street 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


Telephones : 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


357 
374 


G.  B.  HOWARD 


M.  D.  CRESSY 


Q.  B.  Howard  &  Co, 

XTeamsters 
jForwarbers 

Clinton  Market,  Boston,  Mass. 


Cocke  Coal  €o. 


J.  F.  HERNE  CO. 

CHARLESTOWN,  MASS. 
SAWDUST 

BALED  SHAVINGS 

GRADED  HARDWOODS 

SWEEPING  COMPOUNDS 
EXCELSIOR 

c.  B.  smitn  &  Bro. 

mUboleeale 
(Brocers 


^^AYY^TTVT  J     ».^irrfc¥rr%»i  rk  AND     WHOLESALE     DISTRIBUTORS 

MALDEN  and   MEDFORD  and   owners   of 


STATE  HOUSE  FLOUR 


70 


CLASS  28— CONFECTIONERS 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  may  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


360  Independent  Ice  Cream  Co. 

361  "  

(Third  Year  in'Parade) 

362  Libby  Ice  Cream  Co. 

363  

364  

365 

366  The  Three  Millers  Co. 

367  "         "  "       " 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade  for  nigh  horse) 

368  Neapolitan  Ice  Cream  Co. 
369 

370 

371  "             


373     New  England  Confectionery  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


374 

(Fifth  Year  in 

Parade 

375 

(Fifth^Year  in 

Parade) 

376 

(Fourth  Year 

n  Parade) 

377 

(Sixth  Year  in 

Parade) 

•W.  I.  Karp 
Louis  Shulman 

*George  Smith 
Perley  C.  Libby 
Fred  Snow 

*Harry  Wakefield 
John  W.  Phipps 

*Thomas  J.  Gibson 

Joseph  Mclsaac 

Morris  Winer 

Alex.  Bell 
*Thomas  McGrath 

Max  Winer 
*Henry  LaCroix 

*William  P.  O'Conner 

George  H.  Masterson 

*Joseph  P.  McCall 

*  Warren  E.  Davis 


No.  of 
Horses 


M 


^Entitled  lo  Driver's  Badge 


Frank  R.  Blake  Supply  Co. 

EXCLUSIVE  NEW  EiNGLAND  AGENTS  FOR 

BELL  OAT  AND  CORN  CRUSHERS 

\X7E  guarantee  to  save  you  from  15%  to 
"  ^  25%  on  your  grain  bill.  Will  set  up  a 
machine  at  our  expense  to  prove  this  state- 
ment. If  the  saving  is  not  proven  to  you 
we  take  out  machine  and  you  pay  nothing. 


FOR  FURTHER  PARTICULARS,  WRITE,  'PHONE  OR  CALL: 

FRANK  R.  BLAKE  SUPPLY  CO, 

79  PORTLAND  STREET  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone.  HAYMARKET  2345 


The  Beer  That  Made  Milwaukee  Famous 

Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 

GENERAL  N.  E.  AGENTS  OF  THE 

JOS.  SCHLITZ  BREWING  CO. 

Milwaukee,  Wis. 

Wholesale   Dealers,   Importers   and 
Bottlers  of  High-Grade  Goods  Only 

340-350  C  STREET  SOUTH  BOSTON 

TELEPHONE  CONNECTION 


CLASS  28— CONFECTIONERS    Continued) 


1 

No.  of 
flibbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNERS    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

378 

(Sbcth 

New  England  Confecii(Mier\  ('(.. 

Year  in  Parade) 

nVilliam  H.  Collins 

2 

379 

(SLxth 

Year  in  Parade; 

*\Villiam  T.  Seymour 

2 

380 

(Seven 

th  Year  in  Parade; 

*Warren  E.  Kirk 

2 

381 

(Seven 

th  Year  in  Parade) 

*J.  H.  F.  Miller 

2 

382 

(Seven 

th  Year  in  Parade) 

*Bartley  M.  Roe 

2 

383 

New  York  Ice  Cream  Co. 

Thomas  IMolinari 

384 

Oddo's  Ice  Cream 

Anthony  Oddo 

385 

George  Reid 

G.  L.  Reid 

386 

Terminal  Ice  Cream  Co. 

*John  Menconi 

387 

Harry  Turransky 

Harr\  Turran>k>' 

388 

Abe  Wolf 

Abe  W  olf 

2 

'Entitled  to  Drner's  badge 


73 


E.  J.  BABCOCK 

€oal  ana  Cbarcoal 


47  SHERWOOD  STREET,  ROXBURY 

TELEPHONE,  ROXBURY  369 


We  put  your 

Watch  in  order 

for$I.OO 

First  Class 

Jeweiry&Watcii 

Repairing 

Diamond  Experts 


Sylva  &  Silva,  24  Tremont  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 

Telephone,  Mam  4652 
Telephone  Connection 


Plakias' 


12  STATE  STREET 


Compliments  of 

JOHN  A.  HANSON 

XCruckman 


104  High  Street 


Bostc 


Telephone^  Dorchester  796 

DORCHESTER 
ICE  COMPANY 


DORCHESTER 


74 


CLASS  29— GROCERS 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  o1 
Horses 

389 

Bain  Bros.  Co. 

H.  A.  Jerauld 

390 

-Xugiist  Bencks 

Albert  A.  Stolp 

391 

(Third 

M.  Berkowitz                                       Nathan  Berkowitz 

Year  in  Parade.     Blind  horse.     Seven  weeks  in  Ashton  Lawrence  Hospital  with  str^ 

ined  ligament) 

392 

'\.  H.  Bill  &  Co. 

nValter  C.  Mackie 

393 

J.  W.  Bragdon  &  Co. 

John  M.  Coakley 

394 

Henry  F.  Rush 

395 

Harold  A.  Butters 

Thomas  McQueston 

396 

Calumet  Grocery  Co. 

Royal  G.  Bates 

397 

" 

Martin  J.  McDermott 

398 

A.  Cardanelli  &  Co. 

Sy blester  Cardanelli 

399 

Geo.  F.  Chandler  &  Co. 

Lawrence  L.  Donovan 

400 

A.  Costa 

*Joseph  Silva 

401 

Dearborn  Grocery  Co. 

*John  F.  Barthel 

402 

Joseph  E.  Doherty 

403 

\Vm.  A.  Donaway 

John  D.  Jackson 

404 

Eldridge  Baker   Co. 

W.  H.  Sullivan 

405 

Fred  Williams 

406 

Lee  Wood 

407 

Empire  Grocery  Co. 

Charles  Crystol 

408 

" 

Phillip  Rubenstein 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


75 


OFFICE  TEL..  CAMBRIDGE  2o7 


RES.  TEL..  ROXBURY  »n 


I.  FREEDMAN  &  CO. 

Deai.kks  Lv 

Masons'  and  Plasterers'  Supplies 

Manvfacturers  of 

EXTRA    LONG,    FINE 

CATTLE  HAIR 

FOR    PLASTERING 
Large  or  Small  Orders  Promptly  Filled  Write  fjr  Prices 

51-53-55  FIRST  STREET,         EAST  CAMBRIDGE 


Sole  Agents  for  Farnam-Cheshire.  Pittsfield  and  Vermont  Lime 


A  S  SMITH,  Pres.  THOS.  COPELAND,  Supt. 

W.  C.  SMITH.  Asst.  Supt. 

ESTABLISHED  1866 

Boston  Forge  Co. 

Hammered  Iron  and  Steel  Forgings 

OFFICE  AND  WORKS  AT 

340  MAVERICK  STREET 
EAST  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Dover  Stamping 

and 

Manufacturing  Company 

PUTNAM  AVENUE 
CAIVIBRIDQE 


BRASS  SIGNS 
FOR  WAGONS 


C.  H.  Buck  &  Co. 

52  EAST  CANTON  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


Rescue  Mission  Wood 
and  Coal  Yard,  Inc. 

34  Chestnut  Street 
SOMERVILLE,  MASS. 

Telephone,  SOMERVILLE  2460 


76 


CLASS  29 -GROCERS  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVERS    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


409     Nicola  Esposito 

Nicola  Esposito 

410     Joseph  W.  GilH 

James  V.  Gilli 

411     Fred  A.  Hale 

James  E.  Maguire 

412     Martin  L.  Hall  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*F.  B.  Dodge 

413     J.  A.  Holmes  &  Co. 

Albert  DeWolf 

414     "     "         "       "     " 

Charles  Jennes 

415     "     "         "       "     " 

Frank  Harrington 

416     H.  A.  Johnson  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Walter  Call 

417       "  " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  F.  Murphy 

418       ' 

(Fifth  Vear  in  Parade) 

Richard  J.  Sullivan 

419     Joe  Brothers 

Dominic  Draffone 

(Blind  Horse) 


i^Entitlecl  to  Driver's  Badge 


77 


WE  make  a  specialty  of  handling  nothing  but  NUMBER 
ONE    HORSES   in   all   classes   right   off   the  farms  of 
Indiana  bought  by  George  McKinney. 


Regular  Auction  Sales  every  Wednesday,  at  I  P.  M. 


McKINNEY  BROTHERS  &  CO, 

Brighton  Horse  Exchange  and  Sale  Stables 

233  Friend  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Telephone.  HA  YMARKET  848 


Telephone.    CAMBRIDGE  4640 

MAURICE  F.  LIBBY 

Manufacturer  of 

LIBBY'S 
DELICIOUS  ICE  CREAM 

AT  WHOLESALE  TO  STORES,  CHURCHES,  PARTIES 
AND  WEDDINGS 


Our  Motto,  "Pure  Goods  and  Quick  Service" 


25  Water  Street      Somerville,  Mass. 

Compliments! 

of 

^  Jf rienti 


BRIGHTON  PUBLIC  MARKET 

SANITARY-UP-TO-DATE 

Dealers  in 

Groceries  and  Provisions 

Fish  and  Fruit 

BRIGHTON  PUBLIC  MARKET 
352-356  Washington  Street,  Brighton 

Tel.,  BRIGHTON  916  or  900 


Telephone,  BRIGHTON  147 

J.  H.  SULLIVAN  COMPANY 

Contractors 


LAKE  STREET  BRIGHTON 

Corner  Commonwealth  Avenue 


78 


CLASS  29— GROCERS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 

Horses 


420     Samuel  Le\'ingston 

421 

422 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

423  Rosario  Marinelli 

424  O.  G.  Mazman  &  Sons 

425  J.  E.  Moran  &  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

426     

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

427  New  England  Grocery  Co. 

428  Oriental  Tea  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade  for  driver) 

429  Parker,  Masters  Co. 
430 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

431  "  -   " 

432  P.  Pastene  &  Co.,  Inc. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

433 " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

434 

435  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

436  

437 

438 

439 


Harry  Meyers 
S.  Ratzkoff 
Louis  Spirack 

Rosario  Marinelli 
Aram  Mazman 
William  Gammons 

Stephen  Riley 

Jack  Forgine 
James  K.  Boyd 

Harry  Wallace 
*Joseph  Ryan 

*Peter  Barker 
M.  Musto 

Patrick  Musto 

Benj.  Terricciano 
P.  J.  Freeley 
Thomas  Butterfield 
William  Kelley 
M.  McDowin 
Robert  Johnson 


(Blind  Horse) 


79 


"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


THIRTY.  SEVENTH  YEAR 


Helping  Men  to  Help  Themselves 

Boston  Industrial  Home 


INCORPORATED 


Corner  Davis  Street  and  Harrison  Avenue 

COAL  and  WOOD 

We  deliver  anywhere,  in  any  quantity,  at  Lowest  Prices 
Every  Order  Means  Relief  to  the  Poor 

Telephone,  TREMONT  658  OLIVER  C    ELLIOT,  Superintendent 


Compliments  of 


J5he 
STAR 
Brewing 
Company 


Telephone 
M.  J.  SHEA 


SOUTH  BOSTON  401 
Manager 


Wilson  Tisdale  Company 

OLD  COLONY 

STABLE 


Working   Horses  and  Wagons 
To   Let  by   the   Day   or  Week 

46  to  54  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


80 


GLASS  29— GROCERS  (Continued) 
DIVISION  B 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

440      J 

S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

Clarence  Jones,  Vet.  Dri/er 

2 

441 

Daniel  Ferry 

2 

442 

John  Leary 

443 

A.  H.  Goodrich 

444 

.<      u     .< 

*Daniel  Singleton 

445 

John  T.  Powers,  Jr. 

Joseph  Corrigon 

446 

(Third  -V 

Julius  L.  Putnam 

ear  in  Parade) 

Julius  L.  Putnam 

447 

Rhodes  Bros.  Co. 

John  Gillespie 

448 

Chas.  L.  Richardson 

&Co. 

David  Noe 

.449 

Rockwood  Mclntyre 

Co. 

Jerry  Cunningham                (Mules)    2  ■ 

450 

(Third  \ 

G.  Savarese  &  Son 

ear  in  Parade) 

Salvatore  Campana 

1 

451 

Swallow  &  Fales  Co. 

*Samuel  Butehart 

1 

452 

"        "     ■" 

*John  Sullivan 

1 

453 

J.  C.  Talbot 

Irad  Meyers 

1 

454 

(Fourth 

Year  in  Parade) 

Charles  R.  Seibert 

2 

455 

(Fourth 

Timberlake  &  Small 

Year  in  Parade) 

*A.  B.  Torrence 

2 

456 

Daxid  Waldfogel 

Benj.  Waldfogel 

1 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


81 


BLINN,  MORRILL  &  COMPANY 


ZLruchmen 


6   CHATHAM   ROW 

AND 

113   FRANKLIN   STREET 
BOSTON,   MASS. 


WHIPPED                                              CHARLOTTE 
CREAM                                                    RUSSES 

^^^^^^ 

Neapolitan  Ice  Cream  Co. 

DUTCH  GIRL  —  QUALITY  CREAM 

Telephone                   p.  kronenbbrg 
CAMBRIDGE  1785                     President 

OF    EVERY    KIND 
Implements,  Machines,  Woodenware 

Nursery  and  Seed  Trial  Grounds  Conducted  by 
The  Breck=Robinson  Nursery  Co., 

Munroe  Station,  Lexington,  Mass. 

P^special  attention  paid  to  Landscape  Designing, 

I'lanting,  Forestry,  Horticulture,  etc. 

BrecK's  Real  Estate  AQSt^cy 

Farms,  Suburban  Properties,  etc. 

BrecK's  Bureau 

Furnishes  Approved  Employees.  Mercantile, 
Agricultural,  Horticultural 

President,  GEO.  H.  BUCK         Treasurer,  DAVID  C.  BUCK 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

JOSEPH   BRECK  <S  SONS,   Corp. 

51-52  North  MarKet  St..  Boston.  Mass. 

Telephone  Richmond  23C.0 

EVERETT  AVE.  and  MAPLE  ST. 

CHELSEA 

Storage    for    all    kinds    of   Merchandise    and 
Household  Goods. 

Connected  by  spur-track  with  B.  &  M.  R.R. 

Shipments  made  direct  by  rail  or  by  our  own 
teams. 

Thomas  F.  Moroney 
Express 

10  Morgan  Street     SOMERVILLE 

82 


CLASS  30— PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 

deserved. 


No.  of 

Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


4o7 

Boston  Elevated  Ry.  Co. 

Charles  S.  Moore,  Vet.  Driver 

458 

..       >. 

Patrick  J.  Connelley 

459 

(Sixth  \ 

ear  in  Parade) 

*  Daniel  Hayes 

460 

Thomas  Murra>-,  Vet.  Driver 

461 

Enos  Rose 

462 

Cambridt;e  Gas  Lt.  Co. 

*Eugene  O'Brien 

463 

John  Quinn 

464 

*John  P.  O'Brien 

465 

Frank  Bellis 

466 

Michael  Burns 

467 

John  Harrington 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

468     East  Boston  C.as  Co. 

469 

470 


471 

(This  mare 


the  reconstructed  class  last  year) 


472 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


473     Maiden  Electric  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


474 
475 
476 


*  Frank  F.  Cai)en 
*Eugene  Redihan 

Frank  Hanson 

Geo.  H.  Peachey,  Jr. 

^Herbert  A.  Oliver 

*Joseph  Rcard(Mi 

E.  Threnson 
Charles  Hawkes 
James  Roone\- 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


S3 


^t 


lo-zo  i^o^K'Xj^iTonxr  st.  :^-A.ciaL  •¥=t A-y 


Boston  Offices: 

36  BROAD   ST.  130  BEDFORD  ST.  76  KINGSTON  ST. 

"'*    I  Forf  A/,//  25669  Teh.  ,  0;r/^orJ  22966 

Boston  Call  Boxes: 

62  Commercial  St.  24  S.  Market  St. 

Ryan  Transportation  Company 

BROCKTON  and  BOSTON 

Brockton  Office: 
Telephone,  BROCKTON  2165  71  COURT  STREET 


L.  S.  HARTSHORN  Telephone,  MAIN  132 

JENNESS  e  COMPANY 

Truckmen  and   Forwarders 


OFFICE: 
44  Federal  Street  Boston,  Mass. 


John  H.  Waters  (b  Co. 

(3rocer6  anblTmporters 

1441  WASHINGTON  STREET  BOSTON,  MASS, 

Telephone.  TREMONT  8c8 

84 


CLASS  30— PUBLIC  SERVICE  CORPORATIONS  (Continued) 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S 

NAME 

DRIVER'S   NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

477      Maiden  Electric 

Co. 

Louis  Thomas 

478 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

" 

Frank  McCombe 

479     Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  Murphy 

480 

"       " 

E.  Wright 

481           

••       " 

M.  Carr 

482           

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

" 

L.  Reardon 

483           

"       " 

L.  Dunn 

484 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

" 

C.  ColHns 

485           

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

" 

D.  Sullivan 

486           

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

" 

*Tim  Sullivan 

487           

••       " 

D.  Foley 

488           

(Fifth  Year  in   Parade) 

.. 

*J.  Buckley 

2 

489     New  England  Telephone  & 
Telegraph  Co. 

John  I.  McDonald 

1 

•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


85 


Compliments^ 
of 

S  Jfrienb 


BOSTON  LIVE  POULTRY  CO. 

Receivers  of 

Live  and  Dressed  Poultry 

77-79  Fulton  Street       Boston,  Mass. 

Little,  Brown  &  Co. 
Ipublisbeis 

an^ 

JBooksellcrs 

34  BEACON  STREET,  BOSTON 


W,  J.  Higgins&  Company 

Importers  and  Grocers 

128-134  EMERSON  STREET 
SOUTH  BOSTON 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


LONDON  HARNESS 
COMPANY 

JOHN   HANCOCK  BUILDING 

176  DEVONSHIRE   STREET 
27  to  29  FEDERAL  STREET 


CLASS  31— MANUFACTURERS 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such   ribbons,   First,   Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


490  Albcn-ti  Bo.x  Co. 

491  American  Paper  Stock  Co. 

492  

493  AtwTK  d  cS;  McManus 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

494  

I  Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

495  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


496 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


49- 


498  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

499  

oOO  

(Seventh  Year  in  Par  idi-j 

501  

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

502  Barrett  Maiuifacturing  Co. 

503  Boston  Blacking  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Paradf) 

504 

(Third  Year  in  Parad.-) 

505 

(Third  Year  in  Paradii 

506  Boston  &  Lijckport  Block  Co. 

507  

508  Boston  Citler  Co. 


(Jtto  W.  Thornrose 
Alichael  J.  Casey 

*Geo.  J.  Finch 

*John  Luzzato 

*Echvard  \V.  Riley 

nVilliam  J.  H.  OliYer 

'^  Lou  is  A.  King 

George  E.  Nay 
Michael  Foley 

Thomas  Barrett 
*Joseph  J.  Cronin 

Nathan  Higgins 

Edward  A.  E\ans 
Walter  E.  Holmes 

^Joseph  LeClair 

Nicholas  Oster,  Jr. 

I'eter  Oxerlan 
\\  elister  J.  (iorm lex- 
Thomas  ¥.  Donnelly 


87 


'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


WHARF  AND  MAIN  OFFICE 


496  First  Street,  South  Boston 


JOHN  A.  STETSON 

President  and  General  Manager 


ROBERT  D.  HALL 

Treasurer 


The  Boyd  Brockton 
Transportation  Co. 


INCORPORATFD 


BOSTON  OFFICES: 


71  and  139  Kingston  Street 
54  Chatham  Street 
89  Broad  Street 

Member  of  Expressmen's  League 


Bain    Brothers   Co* 

Wholesale 
GROCERS 

240  MILK  STREET,  BOSTON 


TELEPHONE  CO^NECTION 


A.  J.  BARTLETT 

ESTABLISHED  1840 

Commission  Mercliant  and  Dealer  in 

Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs  and  Poultry 

BEsT  GRADES  A  SPECIALTY 

7  and  8  No.  Market  Street  and  7  Clinton,  Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


Frank  M.  Babcock 
TEAMSTER 

258  WASHINGTON  ST.  Room  2 

Telephone,  Fort  Hill  2940 

The  delivery  and  receipt  of  freight  at  all  Boston 
Freight  Terminals  a  specialty. 

Business  established  over  seventy  years  and 
always  located  in  the  vicinity  of  Washington  and 
Water  Streets. 


88 


GLASS  31-MANUFACTURERS  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S   NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

509 

fFifth  \ 

Flash  Chemical  Co. 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Patrick  E.  Burke 

1 

510 

(Tliird  -^ 

M.  Gordon 

'ear  in  Parade) 

*Edward  H.  West 

1 

511 

Heywood  Bros.  &  Wakefield  Co 

William  J.  Carver 

1 

512 

F.  A.  Horle 

William  J.  Wind 

1 

513 

Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Corp. 

William  F.  O'Neil 

2 

514 

Frederick  W.  Godbold 

2 

515 

(Third  -* 

'ear  in  Parade) 

Thomas  J.  Murphy 

2 

51(3 

Lever  Bros.  Co. 

Arthur  Scanlon 

1 

517 

"       " 

Joseph  Mahler 

2 

518 

Little,  Brown  &  Co.,  Inc. 

John  H.  O'Connor 

1. 

519 

(Third  ^ 

i'ear  in  Paradt-i 

*Daniel  A.  Harrington 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


80 


Compliments  of 

Houghton  &  Dutlon  Co. 

New  England's  Greatest  Cash  Store 

We    keep    business    UP 
by  keeping  prices  DOWN 

THE  STORE  OF  THE  PEOPLE 


You  Can  Always  Depend  On 

ACTON  FARMS 

Fresh  /Wilk 

PERFECTLY  PASTEURIZED 
IT   IS    ABSOLUTELY    SAFE 

ALSO 

CREAM    AND    BUTTERMILK 

Delivered  daily  on  our  own  teams 
m  all  parts  of  Somerville  and 
Cambridge,  Boston  '  proper,  in- 
cluding Back  Bay,  Charlestown, 
East  Boston,  Roxbury,  North, 
South  and   West  Ends 


of 
^  Jfrienb 


■JO 


CLASS  31— MAiNUFAGTURERS 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
tntry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


kc't  r 


520  Xational  Ca 

521 

522 

523 

524 

(Foiirtli  Year  in  Parade) 


525     \\":r.  \(  rris  iS;  Son: 
52()     Thoiras  G.  Plant  Co. 

(Tentli  Year  in  Parade) 


o2 1 

(Seventh  Yr 

ar 

in  I 

'arade) 

.'28 

(Fifth  Year 

in 

Par 

ide) 

52<) 

(Seventh  Y( 

ar 

in  1 

^aradei 

531 

(Fourt 

1  \'<"ar  in  Parade) 

582 

Kaiul  eS:  B\am 

53:i 

534 

Kci^al  Shoe  C"() 

535 

S.  RosenhcT<4 

o3() 

537 

•• 

538 

•• 

539 

RosL-nlhal  Bn,^ 

DRIVER'S  NAME 


Daniel  Shea 
Jolm  j.  S^veene^' 
Charles  E.  Walker 
Manuel  P.  Santos 
*Geo.  E.  Bell 

Isadore  Querido 
Frank  M.  Harringtt  n 

'"Edward  Flannagan 

Frank  P.  Winchester 

*Tinioth>-  J.  Harrin^tf.n 

Patrick  Ryan 
'■^^ich.ard  Brinkert 

Da\is  Re^idennan 

R.  D.  Alennell 

William  E.  Dcnoxan 

J>  seph  Ha>cs 
*Roberl  Howard 
"^John  SulUxan 

Benj.  Godfrey 

Leon  Rosenthal 


No.  c1 

'iorses 


91 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badsje 


Compliments  of 


FOX  BAKERY 


GENERAL  BAKING 
COMPANY 


'^JT'eJf^ 


SHAPLEIGH  COFFEE  CO., 
BOSTON. 


ESTABLISHED  1872 


D0HERTY6DALY 

Bottlers  of 

Mineral  Waters,  Tonics,  Etc. 

SODA  TANKS  A  SPECIALTY 


309  and  31 1  Albany  St.,  Boston 

Telephone,  TREMONT    II74-M 


Compliments  of 

The 

HUNT=SPILLER 
MANUFACTURING 
CORPORATION 


LEACE  W.  EDDY 
General  Contractor 


Uphams  Corner 


BOSTON 


A  FREE  CLINIC  FOR  ANIMALS 
OF  THE  POOR 

IS  MAINTAINED  DAILY  FROM 
2  TO  3  O'CLOCK  BY  THE  NEW 

Commonwealth  Hospital 
For  Animals 

24  CUMMINGTON  STREET  BACK  BAY 

Telephone.  BACK  BAY  2946 


92 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


GLASS  31  —  MANUFACTURERS  (Continued) 

DIVISION  B 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 

Horses 

540     George  W.  Scobie                               Hugh  F.  Scobie 

1 

541     The  Simmons  Mfg.  Co.                     Geo.  Teegan 

1 

542     Fred  W.  Toothaker                            Edward  L.  Murphy 

1. 

543          ■                             *Henry  W.  Morris 

1 

544 

(Fourth  "' 

y'ear  in  Parade) 

Albert  Murphy 

1 

545  The  Warner  &  Childs  Co. 

(These  horses  are  brothers) 

546  George  H.  Webber 

547  Western  Electric  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

548 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

549  John  Wyeth  &  Bro. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

550  Sylvester  Tower  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


Maurice  J.  Donnelly 

George  H.  Webber 
Daniel  E.  Cunningham 

Michael  F.  Dugan 

*\\^alter  Furlong 

*George  E.  Doyle 


2.       V 

1 

1 
1 
2 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


03 


Compliments  of 


Eastern  Oil  and 
Rendering  Co. 

FURBUSH  &  CO.,  Inc. 


225     Rutherford     Avenue 
CHARLESTOWN,  MASS. 


Compliments  of 

W.  S.  Ouinby  Co. 

COFFEE  and  TEA 
MERCHANTS 


BOSTON 


CHICAGO 


F.  E.  WILSON 

Hay  and  Straw 

Wholesale  and  Retail 

Also  All  Kinds  of  Teaming 
Horses  For  Sale 

546  6th  STREET  SOUTH  BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 


...Buy... 

CHASE'S 

SUPERFINE    FAWN 
WOOL    SQUARE 

BLANKETS 

Best  Blanket  for  Truck  Purposes  —  Look 
for  the  Three  Horse  Head  Trade-Mark — 
When  buyingHack  Robes  look  for  the  word 

"CHASE" 


Telephone,  MAIN  1457 

R.  F.  THURLOW 
Ulatcb  and  Clock  Kepairing 

8  CITY  HALL  AVENUE 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

truckman 

155  FEDERAL  STREET 
BOSTON        -        MASS. 

Telephone,  FORT  HILL  3380 


94 


CLASS  32— BUILDERS  AND  DEALERS   IN  BUILDING  MATERIAL 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

5cl 

(Third  V 

Barbour-Stockwcll  Co. 

ear  in  Parade) 

Timotliy  Burns 

8 

552 

(This  hor 

Barry  Buikling  Wrecking  Co. 

se  is  32  years  old) 

Josejih  Farle\' 

' 

553 

Hyman  Belinsk\' 

Hyman  Belinsk\- 

1 

554     James  P.  Brennan 

James  P.  Brennan 

J 

555     The  Brockway-Smith  Corp. 

Thos.  J.  O'Hara 

1 

556 

Robert  B.  Austin 

2 

557 

James  J.  Clifford 

2 

558 

'• 

John  A.  Rouse 

2 

559     Patrick  Coffe\- 

Arthur  F.  Coffey 

1 

560     Crane  Co. 

George  Smith 

1 

561 

*Fred  Riley 

1 

562 

"^James  Driscoll 

1 

563 

Michael  Cotter 

1 

564 

*Bart  Moran 

2 

565 

*A.  Cxauss 

2 

566     W.  Bowman  Cutter 

Kenneth  Martin 

1 

567     Davis  Sand  Co. 

*John  M.  Brewer,  Vet.  Driver 

2 

568     J 

ohn  Dekmey  &  Son 

Frank  P.  Dclaney 

1 

569     J 

ohn  \V.  Drake 

John  Davis 

1 

570     Eastern  Dredging  Co. 

Fred  J.  Jondreau 

1 

571 

•• 

Charles  Smith 

1 

572     John  Farquhar's  Sons,  Inc. 

Frederick  C.  W'illard 

1 

*Entitk'(l  to  Driver's  Badsje 


Honey  Bread 
'*Sweetas  Honey" 


WHITE 
SEAL 
BREAD 

With  the  Real  Old  Home  Flavor 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


FERGUSON  BAKERY 

GENERAL     BAKING     COMPANY 


A.  E.  Bliss 

General  Superintendent 

Maiden  Electric  Company 

Maiden  and  Melrose 
Gas  Light  Company 


Importers  of  and  Whole- 
sale Dealers  in 
WINES  and  LIQUORS 


Bottlers  of 

LAGER  BEER 

ALE  and  PORTER 


ESTABLISHED  1874 


Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

467  and  469  East  Eighth  Street 
SOUTH  BOSTON 

Proorietors'JO^N  S.  LEICHT 
rroprieiors  ,  hENRY  I.  SCHREINER 

Telephone.  SOUTH  BOSTON  544 


G.  O.  Lanphear  J.  H.  Elwel 

F.  L.  MOORE  &  CO, 

truckmen  and  forwarders 

246  Purchase  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  MAIN  7076 


P.  Pastene  &  Co. 

IMPORTERS  AND  EXPORTERS 

TFtalian  Iprobucts 

69  to  75  Fulton  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Established  1865 


Telephone,  TREMONT  3J4 


J.  M.  DOUGLASS 

EXPRESS 

Furniture  and    Piano    Moving.     Pack 

Furniture    for    Shipment.      Store 

Furniture.      Clean  and  Relay 

Carpets 

134  WEST  CANTON  ST.,  BOSTON 
Down -Town  Office,  30  INDIA  STREET 


96 


CLASS  32— BUILDERS  AND  DEALERS  IN  BUILDING  MATERIAL 

(Continued) 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


578     John  Forau 

574  I.  Frecdmaii  &  Co. 

(Tliird  Year  in  Parade) 

575  "  "  " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

576  ].  B.  Hunter  Co. 

iThird  Year  in  Parade) 

577  \V.  S.  Kaulback 

578  John  Martin  &  Co. 

579  Edward  F.  McGuinness 

(Tliird  Year  in  Parade) 

580  Samuel  Steinberg 

581  James  Sugden  Co. 
582 
583 
.584 
585 
.586 
587 

588  J.  H.  Townsend  ..^  Co.,  Inc. 

589  H.  Wolpe 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


*John  J.  F'oran,  Jr. 
*Anthony  M.  Sylvester 

William  Davis 

Henry  E.  Parker 

Thomas  F.  Geason 
William  C.  Martin 
Edward  F.  McGuinness 

Samuel  Steinberg 
John  F.  Sullivan 
Peter  Powers 
C.  J.  Nangle 
Bert  Uriot 
Patrick  Ahern 
John  Evirs 
Harvey  Steeves 
Adelbert  A.  Bilker 
^Isadore  L.  Woljie 


No.  o{ 
Horses 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


Compliments  of 

Merrifield  &  Company 

99  BLACKSTONE  ST. 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


J.  L.  McCarthy 

COAL 

General  Teaming 

(Rear)  1542  TREMONT  STREET 

Tel.,  ROXBURY  472 

ORIGINAL  DIXIE  BRAND 
PEANUT     BUTTER 

AND 

SALTED  PEANUTS 

MANUFACTURED  BY 

THE  KELLY  PEANUT  COMPANY 

200  State  Street     .     .     Boston,  Mass. 


F.  L.  LIBBY 


C.  S.  HUCKINS 


LIBBY  &  HUCKINS 
Ceamsters  and  Yorwarders 

26  MERCANTILE  STREET 

Telephone,  Richmond  2060 

MOVING  ALL  THE  TIME 


A.  J.  Wilkinson  &  Co. 

Importers,  Manufacturers  and  Dealers  in 

HARDWARE 

MACHINISTS'  AND  MANUFACTURERS' 
SUPPLIES 

180  to  188  WASHINGTON  and  19  to  25 
DEVONSHIRE  STREETS 

Between  State  Street  and  Dock  Square 

BOSTON 


THOMAS  BENSON  WALTER  W.  BENSON 

Telephone,    Richmond  296 

BENSON  BROTHERS 

DEALERS  IN 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal,  Pork,  Lard, 

Hams,  Bacon,  Sausages,  Poultry, 

Game,  Butter 

New  York  Hips,   Tops  and  all  Rattle  Products 

86  North  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


CLASS  33— METALS  AND  JUNK 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,    First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


590  Morris  Baer 

591  Harry  Frede 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

592  Barnet  Greenstein 

593  V.  Gaurcello 

594  '• 

595  " 

596  Patrick  O'Brien 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

597  S.  Smolker 

598  Maurice  Tigar 

599  Simon  Yanoff 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Nathan  Baer 
Andrew  Zeus 

Isaac  Ballon 
V.  Mino 
S.  Piro 
Lio  Giacolo 
Patrick  O'Brien 

S.  Smolker 
J.  Ettinger 
Phillip  Harris 


No.  d 
Horses 


(Billy  Goats) 


«>!) 


Hill  €}  Hill 

Heavy  Team,  Farm  and  Delivery 
Harness 

Stable  Supplies,  Horse  Clothing 

Harness  House  for  40  Years 


Telephone,  Main  4612 

Sampson  &  Coleman 
TRUCKMEN 

Agents 

DART  EXPRESS  CO. 

ROCKLAND  TRANSPORTATION  CO. 


OFFICE: 
10  Hawley  Place 


ORDER  BOX: 
75  South  Street 


BOSTON,  MASS. 


90  FedBial  StieBi,  Boston 


J.  C.  Talbot 

FANCY  AND  STAPLE 

(5ioccries 

1  isr  Washin§:ton  St.,  Dorchester 

Branch  Store  : 

Associates  Building 

MILTON  Established  1815 


10) 


CLASS  34- BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as   they  deem  to  be 
leserved. 


No.  cf 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  0l 
Horses 


tiOO 

H.  P.  Abbott 

Geo.  F.  McDonald 

(iOl     \Vm.  Albrecht 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Rheinold  Stengel 

002 

(Foiirt 

Ba\-  View  Bottlins:  Co. 

1  Year  in  Parade) 

*Martin  Haynes 

603 

., 

Daniel  Madden 

<J04 

.. 

*Conrad  Wenz 

aoo 

*Frank  Kunz 

(306 

Steven  Cheney 

607 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

^Patrick  Cronin 

608 

.. 

Daniel  Shea 

609         

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Ignatius  Fettig 

010 

D.  Carmelio  &  Co. 

Joseph  Carmelio 

611 

Salvatore  Cecci 

612 

(Third  Year  in  Parade)     " 

Angelo  Graziano 

613 

L.  Capozzoli  &  Co. 

Antonio  Sergi 

014 

..    . 

A,  DiFronzo 

015 

Pasquali  Reppucci 

616 

Commercial  Bre\ver\'  Co. 

C.  ("apillo 

617 

I)i  Pietro  Bros.  &  Marini 

Joseph  F.  Warren 

618 

John  B.  Marini 

619 

Giuseppe  Sabia 

620 

Dohcrt>;  cS:  Dal>- 

Joseph  H.  Doherty, Vet.  Driver 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


ioi 


Tel.,  HAYMARKIiT  2165-J 

A.  SANSONE 

Wholesale  Dealer  in 

Foreign  and  Domestic  Fruits 

47  PITTS  STREET    BOSTON 


J.  C.  DRISCOLL 

TRUCKMAN 

AND 
FORWARDER 


46  Fulton  SL 


Boston 


Compliments  of 

C.  S.  Johnson 


William  Krauss 

6rocerie$  and  Prowsions 

502  East  Eighth  Street 
South  Boston,  Mass. 

Tel.,  SOUTH  BOSTON  127-W 


Clielsea  Iron  and  Coal  Co. 

HIGH  GRADE 

HONEY  BROOK   Cf)  A  I      WILKESBARRE 
LEHIGH         ^^        ^  FREE  BURNING 


OLD  COMPANY'S  LEHIGH 

WE  SOLICIT  YOUR  INQUIRIES 

194  Broadway     Chelsea,  Mass. 


Compliments  of 

THE  AMERICAN 
AGRICULTURAL 
CHEMICAL     CO. 

Manufacturers  of 

High  Grade  Fertilizers 

Telephone,  MAIN  5660 


SAVOY  WINE  and  IMPORTING  GO. 

Wholesalers  in 

Toreiflii  and  Domestic  tmm 

201-205  Hanover  Street 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone,  RICHMOND  68 


Marine  Office  Towel  Supply  Co. 

564  Washington  Street 
BOSTON 

Telephone,  OXFORD  1011 


i02 


CLASS  34-BOTTLERS,  WINE  DEALERS  AND  BREWERS 

(Continued) 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


621  Doherty  &  Daly 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

622  Vincenzo  Eremo 

623  F.  L.  Frankel  &  Co. 

624  Joseph  Gahm  &  Son 
625 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

626 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

627 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

628 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade  for  one  iiorse; 

629  Frank  Guerra 

630  W.  J.  HiRgins&  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

631  "    " 

632  Joseph  Kirchgassner 

633  L.  J.  Logan  &  Co. 

634  Star  Brewing  Co 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

635  

636  

637  

638  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

639  Sterling  Wine  Co. 

640  John  H.  Waters 

641  William  J.  Welch 

642  Charles  W.  Wolf 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade; 


*Michael  Daly 

Vincenzo  Eremo 

P.  Frankel 
*Peter  Ward 
*Geo.  A.  Forsythe 

^Charles  Harrison 

*Harry  A.  Melendy 


*Fred  J.  Wilkins 

Second  Year  for  the  other) 


E.  Froncazio 
Frank  J.  Connors 

*John  F.  Dinneen 
Joseph  Kirchgassner 
Bartholomew  J.  Clemento 

*Thomas  Riley 


No.  ol 
Horses 


Nicholas  Grealy 

2 

Cornelius  Crowley 

2 

*Peter  Maguire 

2 

*William  Dineen 

2 

Daniel  R.  Forbes 

1 

nVilliam  S.  Blaisdcll 

1 

Michael  H.  Hughes 

1 

Charles  W.  Wolf 

1 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


103 


Telephones,  SOUTH   BOSTON 


Telephone,  EAST  BOSTON   30 


JOHN  J.  WHITE 

Commission  JVIercliant 

HAY,CRAi!^  ANOSTRAW 
SWALE  HAY  A  SPECIALTY 


85  Dorchester  Avenue 
SOUTH  BOSTON,  MASS. 


J.  B.  Hunter  Company 

Maibware 

60  Summer  Street      Boston 


Telephones,  CHARLESTOWN  366  and  367 

Members 

Boston    Chamber   of   Commerce 
National  Hay  Association 

PHELPS  BROS.  CO. 

"ZU  Bay  men" 

COMMISSION    MERCHANTS 


431  Rutherford  Avenue 

CHARLESTOWN 


Telephone,  RICHMOND   709 

L.  CAPOZZOLI  6  CO. 

Wholesalers   of  Imported   and   Domestic 

Wines,  Liquors  and  Cordials 

225  to  233  North  Street 
BOSTON 

Orders  Given  Immedi&te  Attention 


F  J.  McCarthy  &  Co, 
Grocers  and  Importers 


FOREIGN  AND  DOMESTIC  LIQUORS 
FOR  FAMILY  AND  MEDICINAL  USE 

Bottlers  of  Lager  Beer  and  all  Kinds  of  Ales  and 
Porters 

225  Havre  St.,  East  Boston,  Mass. 


Telephone,  RICHMOND  1397 

R.  G.  CHRISTIE  &  GO. 

Teamsters  and 
Forwarding  Agents 

79  North  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Telepbone,  RICHMOND  1231 

McKinnon  &  McKenzle  Go. 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

BEEF,  PORK,  LAMB,  VEAL   and 
POULTRY 


Hotel  and  Resiauranl  Supplies 


41  JOHN  STREET,  Corner  NORTH 
BOSTON.  MASS. 


COMPLIMENTS  OF 


A.  W.  KNIGHT 

truckman 

60  BROAD  ST.,  B05T0N 


104 


CLASS  35— HAY  AND  GRAIN 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,    First,   Second   or   Third,   as  they  deem   to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

643 

A.  Fitch  cS:  Co. 

*Archie  J.  Cami:)l)cll 

644 

*Charles  R.  Fitch 

645 

Harr\'  G(jredesk\- 

George  Goredesk\- 

646 

(Third  V 

Fanch'  Brothers 

ear  in  Parade) 

*John  G.  Brown 

647 

(Third  V 

ear  in  Parade) 

*George  N.  Dinin 

64S 

Frank  Riemer 

649 

Jos.  Myerson 

Clavelle  Jesson 

650 

Phelps  Bros.  Co. 

Joseph  D.  Fole>- 

651 

Robert  D.  Waldcn 

652 

*Charles  J.  Lynch 

653 

Estate  of  James  E.  Rol)in.son 

Michael  McCormack 

654 

" 

John  A.  O'Neill 

655 

Patrick  B.  McCormack 

656 

Stanley  &  Harlow 

*Jerry  Forentino 

657 

John  J.  White 

Michael  Mahoney 

658 

James  Noonan 

659 

John  Burke 

660 

Patrick  Mahone\" 

661 

Patrick  Marone>- 

662 

na\"id  C\)whig 

2 

663 

Frank  li.  Wilson 

*J.  A.  Gardner 

2 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


10.1 


PRINTERS 
ENGRAVERS 


BLANK  BOOK 
MANUFACTURERS 


HILL,  SMITH  &C0. 

STATIONERS 
LOOSE  LEAF  SPECIALISTS 

8  MILK  STREET,   BOSTON 

Telephone,  MAIN  1590  Private  Branch  Exchange 

Telephone  Connection 

RHODES  BROS.  CO. 
Grocerigs  and  Propisions 

WHOLESALE  and   RETAIL 

438  to  444  Tremont  Street 

170  to  174  Massachusetts  Avenue 

256  to  260  Warren  Street  (Rox.  Dist  ) 
10  and  II  Harvard  Square,  Brookline 

BOSTON 

Telephone,  SOMERVILLE  1028-M 


Compliments 


OF 


John  W.  Whitney 

Telephone,  EAST  BOSTON  434-W 

Dl  PIETRO  BROS.  &  MARINI 

WHOLESALE  DEALERS  IN 

Foreign  &  Domestic  Wines  &  Liquors 

Bottlers  of  Le&ding   Brands 
of  Ales,  Lagers  and  Porters 

202  and  202^  MAVERICK  STREET  Fra^nXt^st. 

EAST  BOSTON 


Telephone,  CAMBRIDGE  2988-M 

5IM0N  BROS. 

Trucking  and  Teaming 


Office: 

42  LOWLAND  AVENUE 

CAST  CAMBRIDGE 

L.  D.  JOHNSON                      'Phone.  Tremont  7I 

tEbovnbike  Stables 

BOARDfNG  AND  BAITING 

85=95  West  Dedham  Street 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Telephone  Connection 

DUNPHY'S  ROXBURY  EXPBESS 

Offices: 

15  Merchants  Row 
139  Kingston  Street 
169  Dudley  Street 

BOSTON 

W.  F.  McKINNON 


Fruit  and  Produce  Dealer 


204  Vine  Street 
EVERETT,  MASS. 


106 


GLASS  Z 6— LUMBER 


deserved 


The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,   as  thev  d 


eem   to   be 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


604  Eastern  Storage  Co.  *\\'illiani  H.  Sheehan 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Theodore  S.  Desmond 

Richard  J.  Bird 
^Joseph  F.  S)'Kester 
*Louis  Blaine 

John  M.  Burke 
Kinnear  cs:  Son  Robert  E.  Harrington 

*Leroy  S.  Lamprey 

^Patrick  J.  Hurley 

' Alfred  A.  MacDonald 

mber  Cc.  John  Mahoney 

Michael  Mowles 
The  A.  T.  Stearns  Lumber^Co.    *Elmer  ().  Peterson 


665 

(Fourth  Y 

sar  in  Parade) 

666 

667 

668 

(Fifth  Year  in  Paradu) 

669 

670 

William 

671 

672 

673 

674 

Pope  Lu 

675 

676 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


107 


Telephone,  ROXBL  RV  2820 

Dearborn  Grocery  Co. 

Importers  and  Grocers 

47  Dearborn  Street 
Roxbury,  Mass. 

Telephone,  OXFORD  11.55 

Moulton  &  Holmes 
Teamsters 

Office: 

200  Lincoln  Street        BOSTON 

Telephone.  RICHMOND  245                Established  1904 

Silk  &  Albertson 

Wholesale  Commission   Merchants 

Fruit  and  General  Produce 

Potatoes  and  Apples  a  Specialty 

lOS-105  COMMERCIAL  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Reference  :  Cosmopolitan  Trust  Co. 

R.  C.  TCOMEY                       GEO.  G.  ORMON 

Toomey  &  Ormon 

aBroceries  anb  ProbiSions 

48  Crescent  Ave.,  985  Dorchester  Ave. 
DORCHESTER 

Established  1882                                 E.  A.  HARRIS 

H.A.  HOVEY&CO. 

Dealers  in 

Butter,  Cheese  and  em 

No.  32  Faneuil  Hall  Market 
BOSTON 

Telephone.  RICHMOND  9?0 

Frank  Gnecco 

Expressman 

62  Fulton  St.      BOSTON 

1 


iiiii^i  rt 


For  an^  special  occasion 


Cn  Sale  at 


S.  S.  PIERCE  CO.  WOOD,  POLLARD  &  CO.  FOX  BROS. 

RHODES  BROS.  CO.         JOHN  GILBERT,  Jr.,  &  CO. 


108 


CLASS  37— ICE 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 

Horses 


677  Morris  Polack 

678  G.  A.  Russell 

679  The  Boston  Ice  Co. 

680  '     " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

681  

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

682  The  Fells  Ice  Co. 

683  

684  Medford  Ice  Co. 


Morris  Polack 

Daniel  H.  Chatfield 
*A.  Doherty 
*Geo.  T.  Hunter 

*John  J.  McLellan 

Lee  Chisholm 

*Guilford  Saunders,  Vet.  Driver 
John  Boudreau 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


109 


REVERE  HOUSE 

BOWDOIN  SQUARE 
BOSTON 


R.  S.  HARRISON.  Proprietor 


Telephone.  RICHMOND  180 


Empire  Grocery  Co. 

Incorporated 

WHOLESALE  GROCERS 


SPECIALTIES 
Herring,  Molasses,  Sauer  Kraut 

56=58  Fulton  Street  3=5  Ferry  Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 

JOHN  T.  COILEY 

DEALER  IN 

JFriiit  anb  Probuce 

FRESH    IN    SEASON 

We    Try    To  Please 

Residence.  220  WEBSTER  AVE. 

CAMBRIDGE.  MASSACHUSETTS 


Thomas  Campbell 
TEAMSTER 

HEAVY  TEAMING  A  SPECIALTY 

DEALER  IN 

Edgestone,  Paving  Blocks,  Foundation  Stone 
and  Crushed  Stone  for  Concrete  Work 

Stable,  79  Vine  Street,  East  Cambridge 


Complimenls  of 

John  T.  KildufF 
Truckman 

72  Northampton  Street 
BOSTON 

Handschumacher  &  Co. 

Slaughterers,  Packers  and  Manufacturers  of 

Pork  Products 

BEEF,  MUTTON,  LAMB,  VEAL,  PORK,  LARD, 
BACON,  ETC. 

Factory  and  Salesroom 

25-27  JOHN  STREET   26  BARRETT  STREET 

Telephone  ROSTOM 

RICHMOND  187    -DV^O  1  l-Fl'^ 

Telephone  Connection 

HARVARD  GROCERY  & 
PROVISION  COMPANY 

Jfancp  (Groceries! 
anti  ^robisiions! 

FRUIT  AND  FISH 

Cor.  HARVARD  and  GLENWAY  STREETS 
DORCHESTER 


Compliments  of 

l^ational  Ca^sfeet  Co, 

East  Cambridge 


110 


CLASS  38— CONTRACTORS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


I     No.  of 
Horses 


685         G.  Bellizia 
686 

687  Wm.  L.  Buckley 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

688  Thos.  H.  Corrigan 

689  John  Feeney 
690 

691  J.  L.  McCarthy 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

692  "  " 
693 
694 
695 
696 
697 
698 
699 
700 
701 
702 
703 
704 


M.  McGinnis 

Edward  J.  McHugh  &  Son 

Joseph  G.  O'Riorden 


John  Molinaro 

2 

Angeletto  Adelino 

2 

Wm.  L.  Buckley 

3 

Richard  H.  Kilduff 

2- 

James  P.  Dowling 

2^ 

James  O'Hara 

2- 

'Frederick  L.  McCarthy 

2 

Francis  E.  McCarthy 

2 

P.  J.  McGinnis 

2 

^Edward  J.  McHugh,  Jr. 

2 

Mike  Bustin 

2 

Tom  McMarsten 

2 

John  Haley 

2 

Richard  Powers 

2 

Thomas  Sullivan 

2 

Wm.  Keanelh- 

2 

Joe  McCarthy 

2 

Mike  Sullivan 

2 

John  Carroll 

2 

Frank  Folkins 

2 

'Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


111 


t70R  ten  consecutive  years  the  Gold,  Silver  and  Bronze 
Medals,  Brass  Shields,  Special  Prizes  and  Prize  Ribbon 
Rosettes  given  at  the  Boston  Work-Horse  Parades  have 
been  furnished  by  the 

BOSTON  BADGE  COMPANY 

629  Old  South  Building,  294  Washington  Street,  Boston 


THE  BROCKWAY=SMITH  CORPORATION 

Doors,  (Uindows  and  Blinds 
mantels,  Cabinets  and  l)ouse  finish 


98  CANAL  STREET 

ONE  BLOCK  FROM  NORTH  STATION 


BOSTON,  MASS. 

ONE  BLOCK  FROM  HAYMARKET  SQUARE 


Telephone  Connection 


B.  S.  COLE 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal, 
Poultry  and  Game 

Wholesale   and    Retail 

Stalls  13  and  15  FANEUIL  HALL  MARKET 
and  21  MERCHANTS  ROW 

BOSTON.  MASS. 


H.  A.  JOHNSON  CO. 

Bakers'  and  Confectioners'  Supplies 

221=227  STATE  STREET 
BOSTON 


Established  1840 

SAVAGE  &  SON 

Cambridge 

East  Cambridge 

Cambridgeport 

and  BOSTON 

EXPRESS 

Main  Office:    624  Mass.  Ave.,  Cambrid^eport 

D.  A.  Smith  Co. 
TRUCKMEN 

Eight  and  Heavy  Teaming 
45  ATLANTIC  AVENUE 

Telephone.  RICHMOND  928 


1 

i 

J 

n        * 

V 

a 

t 

1 

CLASS  38- CONTRACTORS  (Continued) 


No.  of 

Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

TO.") 

John  M.  Riley 

Peter  Bro 

2 

706 

Thomas  O'Beamis 

2 

707 

George  Devine 

2 

70S 

George  P.  Burke 

2 

709 

Charles  H.  Simpson 

2 

710 

(Third  ^ 

Simon  Bros. 

'ear  in  Parade) 

Herman  Bent 

1 

711 

(Fifth  \ 

ear  in  Parade) 

John  Grace 

2. 

712 

(Third  ^ 

-ear  in  Parade) 

Frank  Souza 

2 

713 

Harry  Marley 

2 

714 

John  Ferdinand 

2 

715 

*Joseph  A.  Simons 

9 

716 

Alexander  Thompson 

Frank  Smith 

1 

717 

Frank  E.  Wilson 

Phillip  Hoppe 

2 

718 

Geo.  Peave\- 

2 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


113 


Compliments 

of 

a  iFrienb 


Snow  &  Parker 

Wholesale  Commission  Dealers  in 

Fresh  and  Salt  Fish,  Lobsters 

41  BOSTON  FISH  PIER 
BOSTON 


W.  M.  Robinson 

HAY,   GRAIN    and 
POULTRY  SUPPLIES 

ADAMS  and  PARK  STS. 
DORCHESTER,  MASS. 


Compliments  of 


Fells  Ice 
Company 


Telephones:   ROXBURY  285  and  298 

Paul  Stucklen  Company 

Wholesale  and  Retail 

GRAINS,    FEEDS,    SEEDS, 
MEALS,  HAY  and  STRAW 

Packing  Hay  and  Poultry  Seeds 

Office,  114  HAMPDEN  STREET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 

Warehouses:   Rear.  108-110-112-114  HAMPDEN  ST. 


a  A.  RICH   CO. 

Wholesale  Fish 

4  BOSTON  FISH  PIER 


Walton's 

LUNCH  CO. 

7  School  St.  629  Washington  St. 

44  Sommer  St.  424  Tremont  St. 

242  Tremont  St.  30  Haymarket  Sq. 

42  Federal  St.  139  Congress  St. 

Bakery,  6^i6  Waterford  St. 

Supply  Kitchen,  35»37  Albion  St. 

Office,  424  Tremont  St. 


114 


CLASS  39- COKE  AND   CHARCOAL 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

719 

E.  J.  Babcqck 

Joseph  Gunario 

1 

720 

William  Rogers 

1 

721 

Daniel  Casey 

1 

722 

"   ■■ 

Frederick  Hayes 

1 

723 

William  Kelley 

1 

724 



*Joseph  Morton 

2 

725 

Cafasso  «S:  Barbato 

Frank  Tyman 

2 

726 

McCarthy  Bros. 

Joseph  Bernardi 

1 

727 

w 

Jeremiah  McCarthy 

1 

728 

" 

Daniel  Sheehan 

2 

729 

Standard  Charcoal  Co. 

*Harry  Martell 

1 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


11.5 


CLASS  40— COAL 
DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

730 

American  Coal  Co. 

*Albert  Fox 

1 

731 

(Third  ^ 

ii'ear  in  Parade) 

*John  Murphy 

2 

732 

(Sixth  ■< 

fear  in  Parade) 

Leo  Porter 

2 

733 

(Third 

Vear  in  Parade) 

*Thomas  W  ard 

2 

734 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co. 

Tom  Deasey 

735 

Barnet  Portnoi 

736 

"       " 

Julius  Tideman 

737 

..       .. 

Charles  Maches 

738 

City  Fuel  Co. 

Cornelius  O'Donnell 

739 

.<       ..       « 

Matthew  Schrue 

740 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

John  J.  Austin 

741 

(Fourth 

Year  in  Parade) 

Edward  Gallinaugh 

742 

Edward  Flynn 

743 

(Third 

Year  in  Parade) 

\Mlliam  J.  Quinn 

744 



James  Entswistle 

2 

745 

Martin  Nee 

3 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


116 


CLASS  40  — COAL  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

'   No.  of 
tntiy 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

746 

Dorchester  Coal  Co. 

*Paul  BudroLi 

747 

.> 

Joseph  EUwood 

748 

Thomas  Dean 

749 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

*  James  Fox 

1   ' 

750 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*James  Evans 

751 

(Fourth  "" 

k^ear  in  Parade) 

*Patrick  Hehon 

752 

" 

*E.  Merrett 

753 

ahird  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*James  Spikes,  Vet.  Driver 

■     754 

' ' 

Thomas  Clark,  Vet.  Driver 

755 



John  Manning 

756 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*James  Bland 

2 

757 



P.  McCartey 

2 

758 

' ' 

*  Patrick  Welch 

2 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


117 


CLASS  40  — COAL 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


59 


Harrison  Coal  C( 


760         Metropolitan  Coal  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

761 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

762 

(Ninth  Year  in"  Parade.     One  of  the  pair  t 

763 

(FifthiYear  in'Parade) 

764 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


765 
766 
767 
768 
769 
770 
771 
772 
773 


(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

775  "    " 


776  "    " 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Morris  Greenberg 
*John  Duggan 
*Patrick  Killian 


James  McCue 

the  Championship  Prize  in  1911.     Mate  is  dead) 


F.  J.  Noyes  &  Co. 
James  P.  O'Neill 

The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 


777 
778 
779 
780 


*Thomas  J.  Dalton 
*John  Marshall 
A.  Davis 
Frank  J.  Noyes 
Lawrence  J.  O'Neill 
Thomas  Kennedy 
Thomas  McDonald 
"  "       "  James  Fitzpatrick 

Michael  O'Neil 
F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradford  Co.     Simon  Fraser 

Wallace  Watson 
*Stephen  J.  Craddock 
*John  Curran 
*Mark  Hernon 
*James  Sulli\an 
*Jeremiah  Cronin 
Patrick  White 
Patrick  Manning 


No.  of 
Morses 


''Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


118 


CLASS  41TRUCKMEN 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  oi 
Horses 

781 

Abbott  &  Fernald  Co. 

*John  H.  Kelley 

1 

782 

Augusta  &  Gilman 

Everett  Forbes 

2 

783 

Frank  M.  Babcock 

William  Roach 

1 

784             

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*\Valter  A.  Stidstone 

1 

785 

(Third  Ye 

ar  in  Parade  for  bay  horse) 

*David  Walsh 

2 

786 

H.  J.  Baird 

*James  Fenner,  Vet.  Driver 

1 

787 

James  F.  Barry 

Titus  G.  Woodworth 

2 

788 

(Fourth  Y 

James  R.  Baxter 

ear  in  Parade) 

*James  R.  Baxter,  Jr. 

1 

789 

" 

Frank  Griffin 

2 

790 

C  Bowen 

John  Donahue 

1 

791 

" 

John  Dtiggan 

1 

792 

" 

Louis  Goneau 

1 

793 

John  Costa 

2 

794 

•• 

Ernest  Ray 

2 

795 

•• 

Justin  O'Brien 

2 

796 

.. 

Joseph  Siverns 

2 

797 

(These  hot 

ses  all  wear  open  bridles) 

Frank  Ba\in 

10 

798         \V.  C.  Bray 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

Henry  W.  Jones 

1 

799 

John  F.  Foley 

2 

800 

*Fred  H.  Feyler 

2 

801 

(Seventh  \ 

'ear  in  Parade  for  black  horse) 

Frank  Mossey 

2 

802 
(Fourth  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Wm.  A.  Simpson 

2- 

119 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

1      No.  of 
Horses 

803 

Patrick  Brennan 

Win.  J.  Brennan 

1 

804 

W.  M.  Buchanan  &  Co. 

Fred  F.  Sears 

1 

805 

.,     .. 

Lawrence  E.  Sa^■age 

1 

806 



\Vm.  H.  CrowIe>' 

1 

809 

(Fourth 

Thos,  Campbell 

Year  in  Parade) 

Edward  J.  Duff>- 

1 

810 

John  Daley 

2 

811 

<< 

James  Coffey 

2 

812 

.. 

Frank  J.  McGovern 

2 

813 

(Fourth 

Year  in  Parade) 

^Thomas  Campbell,  Jr. 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


120 


CLASS  41TRUCKMEN 
DIVISION  B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

814 

Joseph  Canessa 

*Tony  Bagnera 

815 

J.  J.  Cheever 

Michael  Riley 

816 

William  Santry 

817 



Mark  Kenney 

818 

W.  M.  Christie  &  Son 

T.  Degan 

819 

James  Lyden 

820 

(Fourth  ■' 

/eari  n  Parade) 

*John  Lahey 

821 

*Joe  Richardson 

822 

(Fourth 

Year  in  Parade) 

*Ernest  Miller 

2 

823 

A.  Cipoletta 

John  Cipoletta 

824 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

Nicholas  Cipoletta 

825 

M.  Cohen 

Morris  Cohen 

826 

J.  F.  Coursey 

*Michael  Cadigan 

827 

M.  Deveraux 

John  R.  Smith 

828 

" 

Charles  Moore 

829 

(Third  Y 

Samuel  Dillon 

ear  in  Parade) 

Samuel  Dillon 

830 

P.  Di  Napoli 

Vincent  Manopello 

831 

Michael  Di  Napoli 

832 

(Fifth  Ye 

ar  in  Parade) 

*Orazio  Di  Napoli 

833 

(Third  Y 

ear  in  Parade) 

John  H.  lorio 

834 

(Fifth  Ye 

ar  in  Parade; 

*Carmen  Vitale 

2 

121 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  B 


No.  ot 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


I      No.  of 
Horses 


835         C.  Donahue 
8.36 
;      m         Joseph  E.  DonnelK 

!        (Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

838  

839  J.  C.  Drisccll 
840 

(This  horse  is  26  years  old) 

841  

842  

843 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

844 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade 

84.5         Thomas  Duggan 


E.  Harlow 
C.  Donahue 
David  Haley 

James  A.  Carr 
Cornelius  Driscoll 
J.  C.  Driscoll.  Jr. 

Wm.  D.  Hastings 
Wm.  H.  Driscoll 
Wm.  J.  Casey 

Augustin  Tallent 

Thomas  Duggan 


122 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN 

DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

J°;°*                              OWNER'S    NAME 

Entry 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

846         D.  E.  Farwell 

D.  E.  Farwell 

847         Frank  Genecco 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Frank  Genecco 

848         M.  Goldman 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

M.  Goldman 

849         John  A.  Hanson 

Wm.  R.  Dresser 

850            "       " 

(This  horse  won  Second  Prize  in  Reconstructed  Class  in 

Wm.  N.  McConnell 

1912) 

851            "       " 

(This  horse  has  won  six  First  Prizes) 

Michael  Murphy 

852           "       " 

John  A.  Hanson 

853           "       " 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade  for  bay  horse) 

Edward  Pershan 

2 

854         J.  F.  Harney 

John  Nugent 

1 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

856 
857 


Fred  Harvey 

Daniel  O'Connell 
James  Healey 


858         E.  S.  Harris  &  Sen 

John  McDonald 

1. 

859          

George  L.  Ford 

1 

860          

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Wm.  J.  Harvey 

2 

861          "    " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Peter  McDonald 

2 

862         T.  A.  Herlihy  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Daniel  A.  Herlihy 

1 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


123 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  C 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

Ilo.  of 
tntry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  oi 
Horses 

863         jenness  cS:  Co. 

David  Connors 

1 

864 

Frank  Doyle 

1 

865 

Archibold  Lyons 

2 

866 

Thomas  Grady 

2 

867 

*Wm.  J.  Beckman 

2 

868         R.  A.  Kennett 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

Arthur  Kennett 

2 

869          

Peter  LeClair 

2 

870          

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

Pat  Desmond 

2 

871          

John  Forey 

2 

872          ' 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Chas.  Lovering 

2 

873          

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

*M.  J.  Freeman 

2 

874 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Frank  Perry 

2 

875          ••    " 

Earl  Smith 

2 

876          "    " 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

Harry  Freeman 

2 

877          ' 

(These  horses  weigh  4,000  lbs.) 

Perley  Merrifield 

2 

*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


124 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN 
DIVISION  D 

The  Judges  may  award   such   ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,   as   they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horbis 

878 

A.  W.  Knight 

Whitney  Sullivan 

2 

879 

W.  H.  Kogel 

Henry  J.  Kogel 

880 

Libby  &  Huckins 

S.  Allen 

881 

" 

*  Walter  M.  Tower 

882 

- 

*Fred  Haseltine 

883 

*Philip  Charbourier 

884 

- 

A.  E.  Nolan 

885 

" 

Angelo  Cortez 

886 

" 

Frank  Brown 

2 

887 

*Louis  Valiquet 

2 

888 

*Joseph  DeCota 

2 

889 

Thomas  McEnany 

P.  H.  Farrell 

890 

(Fourth 

V'ear  in  Parade) 

Edward  P.  Caleran 

891 

•' 

William  E.  Simonds 

892 

(Fourth 

McKee  Bros. 

V'ear  in  Parade) 

*John  J.  Sweeney 

893 

McNeil  Bros. 

Daniel  McNeil 

894 

Merrifield  &  Co. 

James  O.  Brown 

895 

" 

George  A.  Rogers 

896 

Wm.  J.  Nugent 

2 

897 

(Third  Y 

Joseph  Messina 

ear  in  Parade) 

Joseph  Messina 

1 

•Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


125 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  D 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


898         F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

(Fourtli  Year  in  Parade) 


899 

(Third  Year  in 

Parade; 

900 

(Fourth  \ 

ear  ii 

Parade) 

901 

902 

(Eighth  Y 

ear  in 

Parade) 

903 

Mosler  Safe  Co. 

fi04 

MoLilton  &  Holmes 

905 

u 

DRIVER'S  NAME 


906 

This  mare  took  First  Prize  in  the  Reconstructed  Class  last  year.     She  is  alrick  horse,  and  the 
driver  will  give  an  exhibition  at  the  Reviewing  Stand 


*Fremk  X.  Brown 

*(;ilbert  H.  McWilliams 

Daniel  J.  Murray 

Dwight  J.  Cleary 
*Martin  J.  Cunningham 

Eugene  Buckley 
William  J.  Connors 
*Henry  Doherty,  Vet.  Driver 
John  J.  Bergh 


No.  of 
Horses 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


12t) 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN 

DIVISION  E 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,   First,  Second  or  Third,   as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 

Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVERS    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


907 

Joseph  G.  O'Riorden 

Frank  Barrett 

1 

908 

" 

Robert  Gallagher 

2 

909 

.. 

Abbott  MrDonald 

2. 

910 

Richard  Beaty 

2 

911 

\Vm.  O'Brien 

2 

912 

Frank  White 

2 

913 

James  Lanan 

2- 

914 

Thos.  Toomey 

2 

915 

Rod  Beaton 

2 

916             

(These  horses  weigh  4.000  lbs.) 

Dan  Mahoney 

2 

917 

\Vm.  Palais 

\Vm.  Palais 

918 

Sampson  &  Coleman 

Cornelius  M.  Ahern 

919 

'•      - 

Timothy  Ryan 

920 

•• 

\Vm.  Nolan 

921 

.. 

Chas.  Beals 

922 

.. 

Fred  McDonald 

923 

" 

Joseph  Moore 

924 

,. 

John  Regan 

2 

925 

Patrick  Riley 

2 

926 

George  Washington 

2 

CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  E 


No.  of 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


927  William  Sazinsky 
927A  D.  A.  Smith  Co. 

927B  

927C  

928  Swift  Contracting  Co. 

929  George  H.  Towle 

930  E.  Villemaire 


Moses  Goldstein 

John  Magner 

Edward  G.  Murra\' 

John  Hart 

Neil  Lyons 

^Hartley  M.  Johnson 

Michael  O'Brien 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


128 


CLASS  41— TRUCKMEN 
DIVISION  F 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


931         P.  J.  Wall 

932 

933         N.  Ward  Company 

934 


935         L.  A.  Waterhouse 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Arthur  B.  Girard 
Coleman  P.  Walsh 
Peter  Birmingham 
W^m.  C.  Parker 
*W^m.  Follins,  Jr. 


936 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

(An  exhibition  of  driving  without  reins  will  be  given  by  Ed.  D'Stacio) 


*Fred  L.  DaYidson,  Vet.  Driver       1 


937 

(Third  Year  in 

Parade) 

938 

(Seventh  Year 

in  Parade  for  brown  mare) 

939 

(Fifth  Year  in 

Parade) 

940         J. 

(Third  Year  ir 

H.  Watts 

1  Parade) 

941 


942 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


Edward  Ginnes 
*Wm.  F.  Meese,  Vet.  Driver 
*Fred  M.  Vance 

Charles  R.  Watts 

John  A.  Culbert 
George  W.  Harvey 


943  Weeks  &  Hatch  Transfer  Co.      John  J.  Duggan 

944  F.  D.  Wilkins  cS:  Co.  Peter  P.  O'Connc  r 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


12:) 


CLASS  41  — TRUCKMEN  (Continued) 
DIVISION  F 


No.  of    I      No.  of 
Ribbon  Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


94."!          D.  S.  Woodberr}'  &  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade') 


94() 

(Third  Year 


947 
948 
949 


950 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


^Edward  P.  Goodrich 

*Daniel  F.  Crowley 

John  H.  Ployer 
James  M.  Barnes 
*George  Dickery 
^Ernest  F.  Fanjoy 

*William  Vickery 


951 

952  R.  &  O.  Woodsome  George  Sharpe 

(Third  Year  in  Parade.     The  driver  will  give  an  exhibition  of  driving  without  reins) 

953  "         "  "  Ed.  L.  Waldron 

*J.  J.  Day 


954 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade 


955 


George  Smith 


No.  of 
Horses 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


130 


CLASS  42— OWNERS'  AND  FOREMEN'S  RUNABOUTS 

The  Judges  may  award  a  Silver  Medal  as  First  Prize,  with  Three  Dollars  for  the 
driver;  a  Certificate  and  Two  Dollars  for  the  driver  as  Second  Prize;  a  Certificate  and  One 
Dollar  for  the  driver  as  Third  Prize. 

First  and  Second  Prize  horses  to  receive  blue  ribbons. 

Third  Prize  horse  to  receive  a  red  ribbon. 

"Highly  Commended"  ribbons  may  be  awarded  to  the  remaining  horses. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S    NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

956 

At  wood  &  McManus 

Edgar  W.  Bryson 

957 

(Fourth 

C.  Bow en 

Year  in  Parade) 

^Charles  H.  McCarthy 

958 

Thos.  Campbell 

Thos.  Campbell 

959 
960 

City  Laundry  Co. 
Henry  La  Croix 

Solon  J.  Richardson, 

Vet.  Driver 

George  La  Croix 

961          Estate  of  James  E.  Robinson 

(This  mare  had  twin  colts  last  January) 

Thos.  L  Thornton 

962 

Dr.  W.  F.  Simpson 

Dr.  B.  S.  Killian 

*EntitIcd  to  Driver's  Badge 


131 


CLASS  43— FOUR-HORSE  TEAMS 
LAWRENCE  GOLD  MEDAL 

(This  Class  is  restricted  to  teams  taken  care  of  by  the  driver) 

The  Judges  may  award  prizes  as  follows: 

First  Prize,  Lawrence  Gold  Medal,  to  the  owner;   Silver  Medal  and  Five  Dollars  to 
the  driver. 

Second   Prize,  Silver  Medal   to  the  owner;   Bronze  Medal  and  Four  Dollars  to  the 
driver. 

Third  Prize,  Certificate  to  the  owner  and  Three  Dollars  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 

Entry 

OWNER'S    NAME 

DRIVER'S 

NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

953         L  Freedman                                  *M.  T.  Folger 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade.     This  team  won  the  Gold  Medal  in  1913) 

4 

964         R.  A.  Kennett                              *Levi  Clark 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade.     This  team  won  the  Gold  Medal  in  1910  and  1912) 
(The  average  age  of  these  horses  is  19  years) 

4, 

965 

(Second  Y 

Merrif^eld  &  Co.                            *Richard  F.  Bcates 

ear  in  Parade) 

4 

•^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

These  classes  arc  open  only  to  horses  that  have  taken  three  or  more  First  Prizes  in 
previous  Parades. 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  best  horse,  or  pair,  and  Five  Dollars  for 
the  driver;  and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  avi^arding  the  prizes  in  the  Championship  classes,  the  Judges  may  consider  the  age 
of  the  horses  and  the  number  of  Parades  in  which  they  have  appeared. 

CLASS  44— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,  LIGHT  HORSES 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


966  W.  &  A.  Bacon  Co. 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

967  Bay  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

968  Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

969  "  "         "       " 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

970  City  Laundry  Co. 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

971  Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

972  O.  B.  Gilman 

'Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

973  J.  Facktoroff 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

974  W.  J.  Higgins  &  Co. 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

975  Louis  Jeselsohn 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

976  Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

f Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

977  Toomey  &  Ormon 

(Fiftli  Year  in  Parade) 

978  S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

979 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


*John  Coyne 

*John  B.  Fay,  Vet.  Driver 

*Timothy  Cleary 

*Frank  Bellis 

*Harry  K.  Thompson 

George  Evans 
*Henry  McGowan 
*William  E.  Glennon 
*Edward  T.  Flynn 
*Henry  McKenzie 
*G.  Fred  Seamon 
*Frank  Hoar 

Edward  Cowan 
*Joseph  Garland 


No.  of 
Horses 


133 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


GLASS  45— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,  MIDDLEWEIGHT  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  by  weight,  and  partly  as  doing  their  work  at  a  trot. 
The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horse,  and  Five  Dollars  for  the   driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Ho.  of 

Horses 


980         Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.      Thos.  H.  Uonnelly,  Vet.  Driver     1 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


981 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

982 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

983  Maiden  &  Aielrose  Gas  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

984  Jordan  Marsh  Co. 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

985  B.  F.  Keith's  Theatre 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

986  Salvatore  Mercurio 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

987  W.  S.  Quinby  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

988  Shapleigh  Coffee  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


*John  E.  Dempsey 
*Coleman  McDonough 
*Jere  Conners 

Daniel  J.  Moylan 
*Maunce  J.  F"lynn 

Salvatore  Mercurio 
*Peter  F.  Trainor 


^William  H.  Carter,  Vet.  Driver      1 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


134 


CLASS  46— CHAMPIONSHIP 
DOUBLES,  MIDDLEWEIGHT  HORSES 

These  horses  are  classified  partly  by  weight,  and  partly  as  doing  their  work  at  a  trot. 
The  prize  is  a  Championship   Shield  for  the  horses  and   Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


989         Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co.   *Andrew  Blake,  Vet.  Driver 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


990         S.  S.  Pierce  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


David  Langille 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


ISo 


CLASS  47— CHAMPIONSHIP 
SINGLES,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield   for  the  horse  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver; 
and  the  other  horses  vi^ill  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horse* 


991  E.  J.  Babcock 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

992  A.  J.  Bartlett 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

993  Boston  Industrial  Home 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

994  C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

995  W.  L.  Hallett  &  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

996  Geo.  W.  Harvey  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

997  A.  W.  Knight 

(Tenth  Year  in  Parade) 

998  Maiden  &  Melrose  Gas  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

999  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

1000  National  Casket  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1001  F.  J.  McCarthy  &  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1002  The  Stetson  Coal  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1003  F.  C.  Warren  &  Bradff  rd  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 


*John  J.  Kelley 
*Charles  G.  Vaughn 
*Frank  Riley 
*William  Fitzsimmons 
*Thomas  F.  Roache 
*William  A.  Mellish 
*George  F.  James 

Dominick  DiMarch 
^Bernard  Fox 
*Alexander  Simoneau 

Joseph  Crafts 
*Francis  Cavanaugh 
*John  Arnold 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


136 


CLASS  48 -CHAMPIONSHIP 

DOUBLES  AND  UPWARD,  HEAVY  HORSES 

The  prize  is  a  Championship  Shield  for  the  horses  and  Five  Dollars  for  the  driver;  and 
the  other  horses  will  receive  such  ribbons  as  the  Judges  may  deem  to  be  deserved. 


Na.tf 


He.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S   NAME 


DRIVERS   NAME 


No.  of 


1004         i^twrod  &  McManus 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1005 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

1006  Bain  Bros.  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

1007  Boston  Elevated  Railway  Co 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1008  C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1009  R.  A.  Kennett 

(Ninth  Year  in  Parade) 

1010  "    " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1011  "     ' 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1012  Mead-Morrison  Mfg.  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1013  W.  M-.  Robinson 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1014  Star  Brewing  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 


*John  Foley 
*William  Argy 
*John  L.  Callahan 
Samuel  D.  Foote 
*Thomas  Rouse 
*Elwood  Demerritt 
*Edwin  B.  Ricker 
*Geo.  Benham 
*John  J.  Gilligan 
*M.  F.  Connolly 
*John  A.  Morehouse 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badgt 


137 


GLASS  49— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  A 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  bj'  Red  Acre  Farm. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  0 
Ribbo 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  sof 
Service 

101  o 

Balch-Hatch  Express  Co. 

E.  E.  Wentzell 

Jerry 

13 

10 

1016 

Frank  E.  Boyd 

*Theophilus  Belliveau 

Jennie 

(Blind) 

15 

10 

1017 

Merrifield  &  Co. 

Fred  C.  Norton 

Frank 

15 

10 

1018 

.. 

John  J.  Brown 

Eli 

17 

11 

(These  horses  are  own  brothers  and 
were  in  the  Parade  of  1913) 

Roger 

18 

11 

1019 

J.  K.  Whiting  &  Co. 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

*Robert  C.  Hezlett 

Nigger 

17 

10 

1020 

Fuller  &  Wilson 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*Fred  H.  McDermott 

Joe 

17 

11 

1021 

Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*Frank  I.  Hall 

Ted 

18 

11 

1022 

Tide  Water  Oil  Co. 

of  Mass. 

(Both  horses  in  Parade  of  1909) 

Robert  C.  Beard 

Vet.  Driver 

Harry 
Tom 

16 
16 

12 
12 

1023 

Dellea  Bros. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Wm.  D.  Mooney 

Jim 

18 

12 

1024 

J.  A.  Holmes  &  Co. 

Joseph  L.  Hooley 

Duke 

18 

12 

1025 

Webber  &  Co. 

This   horse    has  been  in  eleven  Pa- 
rades.    In    1904   he  won   Fourth 
Prize,   in    190.5    Third     Prize,    in 
190f)  Second  Prize,  and  First  Prize 
every  year  since  1900. 

*Remus  Burt 

Jerry 

17 

12 

^Entitled  to  Drivi 


Badge 


138 


CLASS  49— OLD  HORSES 

DIVISION  B 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved.  - 


No.  0 
Ribbor 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Year  sof 
Service 

102G 

C.  F.  Eddy  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

nValter  McKay 

Major 

17 

13 

1027 

Bennett  &  Taylor 

Frank  F.  Gray 

General 
Kenny 

(Not  In  competition) 

19 
19 

12 

5 

1028 

Libby  &  Huckins 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*F"rank  J.  Heme 

Mary 

19 

13 

1029 

M.  J.  Gallagher  &  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

James  J.  Willock       . 

Mike 

20 

14 

1030 

Welch's  Medford  Express 

Peter  P.  Levine 

Buckie 

19 

15 

1031 

Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

William  Bardwell 

Bill 

19 

15 

1032 

Brighton  Public  Market 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

William  J.  Fogarty 

Kitty 

20 

15 

1033 

C.  Bowen 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*Robert  W.  Foster 

Kitty 
Nellie 

19 
15 

15 
10 

1034 

Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

James  Vincent 

Morgan 

23 

12 

1035 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

Percy  Mosher 

Paul  Giles 

27 

11 

"Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


139 


GLASS  49— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  C 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs.  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Miss  Julia  H.  Worthington. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Lntry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 
Age 

Years  of 
Service 

1036 

Howe  &  Company 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

Frank  DePattie 

Frank 

20 

15 

1037 

W.  p.  Karshick 

George  E.   Bayden 

Babe 

20 

15 

1038 

F.  L.  Moore  &  Co. 

Richard  J.  CahiU 

Donald 

21 

15 

1039 

N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

A.  LeCaswell 

Blindy 

21 

15 

1040 

C.  Brie^ham  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*George  J.  Farrell 

Kate 

20 

15 

1041 

., 

F.  L.  O'Brien 

Sarah 

22 

16 

1042 

L.  Hirshberg 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*Samuel  Hirshberg 

Tommy 

21 

10 

1043 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dair , 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  F.  Shea 

Jim 

22 

17 

1044 

Parker,  Masters  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

Thomas  Barker 

Maud 

24 

17 

1045 

Otto  E.  Zaugg 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

Henry  Sheehan 

Ginger 

SO 

14 

1046 

The  Stetson  Ccal  Co. 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  F.  Connors 

Vet.  Driver 

Frank 

22 

17 

♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


140 


CLASS  49— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  D 

First  Prize:   Silver  Medal,  offered  by  Mrs,  Amanda  E.  Dwight. 

Two  Second  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Two  Dollars,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

In  addition,  the  Judges  may  award  so  many  "Highly  Commended"  ribbons,  with  prizes 
of  One  Dollar  each,  as  thev  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


104: 

1048 
1049 

1050 
lOol 
1052 

1053 

1054 
1055 

1056 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


L.  Capozzoli  &  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

S.  W.  Gould  &  Bros. 

Barry  Building 
Wrecking  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

A.  J.  Cunningham  &  Cc. 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

Bay  View  Bottling  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

L.  A.  Waterhouse 

(Twelfth  Parade  for  Jumbo) 
(Fourth  Parade  for  Prince) 


Chase  Express  Co. 

(Fourth  Year  jn  Parade) 


Willis  E.  Gowen 
J.  C.  Talbot 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


The  Carter's  Ink  Co. 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 


*M.  Mot  tola 

John  E.  Kelleher 
*James  J.  Shealey 

nVm.  F.  McDonald 
*Henry  Ungemach 
*Ed.  D'Stacio 

*Moses  Durand 

T.  Guardello 
*M.  J.  Rowell 

Patrick  O'Brien 


Horse's  Name 


Horse's 
Age 


Nellie 

2i 

Belle 

25 

Jack 

34 

Dolly 

27 

Mabel 

25 

Jumbo 
Prince 

(Not  in  competition) 

25 

Blind 
Aggie 

26 

Max 

25 

Annie 

Rooney 

25 

Billy 

27 

Year  sof 
Service 


18 


18 


19 

21 
20 

20 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


141 


CLASS  49— OLD  HORSES 
DIVISION  E 

First   Prize:   Gold   Medal,  offered    by  Mass.   Society  for  the    Prevention  of    Cruelty 
to  Animals. 

Two  Second  Prizes:   Four  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Mrs.  Jacob  Hittinger. 

Two  Third  Prizes:  Three  Dollars  each,  offered  by  Fred  L.  Jordan. 

In  addition,  the  Judges   may  award   so  many  "Highly  Commended"   ribbons,  with 
prizes  of  One  Dollar  each,  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

Horse's  Name 

Horse's 

... 

Year s of 
Service 

1057 

D.  W.  Armstrong 

Robert  Tennihan 

Kate 

(Blind) 

31 

20 

1058 

J.  G.  O'Riorden 

James  Duffy 

Jim 
John 

26 
26 

21 

21 

1059 

Morris  Cochran 

Vet.  Driver 

Dan 

32 

27 

1060 

W.  C.  Bray 

Everett  Mclntire 

Frank 

29 

24 

1061 

M.  E.  Bearse 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

*John  J.  Tennihan 

Nell 

33 

22 

1062 

James  H.  Riley  &  Co. 

*J.  H.  Maloney 

Bob 

32 

23 

1063 

The  Hoyt  Company 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parade) 

James  O'Donnell 

Ben 

34 

20 

1064 

Chas.  P.  Whittle 
Manufacturing  Co. 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

*Joseph  P.  Powers 

Baby 

31 

26 

1065 

Chas.  H.  Cutting 

(Second  Year  in  Parade) 

Chas.  P.  Cutting 

Billy 

34 

28 

1066 

Dennis  E.  Perkins 

(This  marc  and  her  dam  have  always 
been  owned  by  the  Perkins  family, 
— covering  a  period  of  fifty  years) 

Dennis  E.  Perkins 

Kitty 

34 

30 

^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


142 


CLASS  50-CHAMPIONSHIP  OLD  HORSES 

In  this  class  Mr.  George  W.  Harrington  offers  a  First  Prize  of  Five  dollars,  money  to 
go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


1067 


106S 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


Horse's  Name 


James  F.  Weir 

(This  horse  has  won  prizes  in  nine 
successive  Parades.  Won  the 
Gold  Medal  for  Old  Horses  in 
1905) 


Jenness  &  Co. 

(This  horse  won  the  Gold  Medal  in 
1911.  and  the  Championship  Prize 
in  1912) 


Fred  E.  Weir 


*Christian  Lorenson 
Vet.  Driver 


Ned 


Black  Jack 


Horse's 
Age 


40 


41 


Year  sof 
Service 


29 


GLASS  51— RECONSTRUCTED  HORSES 

This  class  is  for  horses  formerly  broken  down  by  over-work  or  neglect  or  abuse,  and 
restored  to  health  and  strength  by  their  present  owners. 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons.  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved,  and  the  following  special  prizes  : — 

First  Prize:  Silver  Medal  to  the  owner  and  Two  Dollars  to  the  driver. 

Second  Prize:   Bronze  Medal  to  the  owner    and  Two  Dollars  to  the  driver. 

Two  Third  Prizes:   Two  Dollars  to  the  driver.     Shields  are  not  awarded  in  this  class. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S   NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1069  Geortre  Bloom  George  Bloom  1 

(This  mare  was  used  in  a  coupe.     Was  in  very  bad  condition.     Has  gained  17.5  pounds  the  past  year) 

1070  John  J.  Donovan  John  J.  Dono\an  1 

(Horse  bough  t  5  years  ago  for  $7.5.00.     \ery  badly  run  down.     Has  gained  over  300  pounds.     Owner  has 
been  offered  $2.50.00  by  the  man  who  sold  him  to  the  present  owner  for  $75.00) 

1071  Philip  Gans  Philip  Gans  1 

(This  horse  was  bought  for  $52.00  Sept.  :ird,  1913;   weighed  then  870  pounds  and  was  covered  with  sores; 
now  weighs  1275  pounds) 

1072  James  H.  Lunney  James  H.  Lunney  1 

(This  horse  was  bought  5  years  ago  for  $.50.00.     At  that  time  he  was  pronounced  unfit  for  work .     The  owner 
has  been  offered  $285.00  for  him) 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


143 


CLASS  52-BARREL  RACKS 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

Messrs.  James  Forgie's  Sons  offer  a  handsome  street  blanket,  to  go  to  the  owner  of 
the  best  horse. 

A  Friend  offers  two  gold  pieces  of  $2.50  each  for  the  two  best  horses,  age  considered, 
the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


107;^  J-  N.  Aronson 

1074  T.  J.  Banne 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1075  William  Corbett 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


James  F.  Lynch 

Florian  Neas 
M.  O'Donnell 
D.  F.  Sheehan 
William  J.  W^elch 


107(3 
1077 
1078 
1079 
1080 
1081 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1082  J.  W.  Whitney 

(Mule,  foaled  St.  Patrick's  Day,  >iarch  17th.  l'.»14) 

1083  "    " 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 


1084  ' 

1085  "    " 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade.     This  horse  is  21  years  old) 

1086  "    " 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade.     This  horse  is  24  years  old) 


William  F.  Burns 
T.  J.  Banne 

*Samuel  L.  Corbett 

Joseph  A.  L>nch 
James  B.  Lynch 
*Nathan  Cacicio 
John  Kelley 
D.  J.  Sheehan 
WTlliam  J.  Welch 

Mart  Norton 

Herbert  Clark 

Francis  Whitney 
*John  S.  Driscoll 

*Thomas  Bannister 


1087  •    •' 

(Eighth  Year  in  Parad 


Tliis  mare  is  27  years  old. 


Lew.  Farrell 

Cost  .«7.5.00  ten  years  ai;o) 


^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


144 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS 

The  Dr.  A.  C.  Daniels  Company  offers  one  of  Dr.  Daniels'  medicine  cabinets  to  the 
owner  of  the  best  express  horse. 

DIVISION  A 

The  Judges  may  award  such   ribbons,   First,   Second   or  Third,   as  they  deem  to   be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  o1 
Horses 


1088 
1089 
1090 
1091 
1092 


Harry  Agel 


Agel  &  Spiller 
Bailey's  Express 


1093  Sam  Bailin 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1094  Balch-Hatch  Express  Co. 
1095 

1096         Fred  Blank 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1097 
1098 
1099         Antonio  Bonf^glio 


1100         Boyd  Transportation  Co. 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 
1101 


Samuel  Furberg 
John  Kelley 
Charles  H.  Corcoran 
L.  Feldman 
*Michael  G.  LaRocca 
Sam  Bailin 
S.  E.  Banks 
E.  E.  Wentzell 
Fred  Blank 
Ed  Norton 
John  H.  Blank 
Antonio  Bonfiglio 
John  E.  Porter 
Herbert  A.  Lea 


Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


145 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS  (Continued) 
DIVISION  A 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1102         Brockton  Transporteition  Co.    Joseph  Conley 


1103 
1104 
1105 
1106 
1107 
1108         Cahill's  Brighton  Express 


1109         Thomas  M.  Callahan 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


1110  "       " 

nil  Malcolm  Campbell 

1112  Carroll's  Express 

1113  Carter  Russell  Express  Co.        William  F.  Thompson 

1114  "  "  "         "         Augustus  Anthony 


"       John  J.  Noble 

"  Joiin  J.  Daley 
Algy  McBride 
George  A.  Miller 

"       Charles  H.  Foster 
William  H.  Garvin 
*Charles  T.  Callahan 
Thomas  M.  Callahan 
Malcolm  Campbell 
Willieim  F.  Carroll 


1 

(Blind  Horse)        1 

2 
2 
2 
1 
1 
I 
1 
1 
1 
2 


*Entitk'd  to  Driver's  Badge 


Ufi 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS 
DIVISION    B 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  o1 
Horses 


Giuseppe  Centtorino 
Chase  Express  Co. 


1115 
1116 
1117 
1118 
1119 
1120 

1121  John  J.  Conro}' 

(This  horse  was  shown  in  the  Parade  of  1903) 

1122  "       " 

1123  Timothy  P.  Cooper 

1124  H.  K.  Cushing's  Express 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1125  John  Cuttillo 


1126 

Florindo  Di  lorio 

1127 

Winslow  H.  Dodge 

1128 

(SLxth  Year 

1129 

in  Parade) 

J.  B.  Dolliver 

1130 

A.  Edgcomb  Co. 

1131 

Frank  Esposito 

1132 

" 

1133 

Frank  Foti 

1134 

Garrison  &  Waterman 

1135 

Santo  Gemcllaro 

1136 

Gilman  Express  Co. 

1137 

" 

1138 

.< 

1139 

a 

1140 

E.  Hapgood 

1141 

Willis  E.  Gowen 

Giuseppe  Centtorin.) 
Axel  Peterson 
Ely  Rensentern 
W.  H.  Varnimi 
H.  F.  O'Neil 
Herbert  Coulter 
John  J.  Conroy,  Jr. 
William  Wilson 
Timothy  P.  Cooper 

*William  T.  Hickey 
James  Cuttillo 
Florindo  Di  lorio 
William  Fellows 
Winslow  H.  Dodge 

*George  E.  Dolliver 
John  J.  Manning 
J.  Sardina 
Frank  Esposito 
Frank  Foti 
Barney  Gerson 
Santo  Gemellaro    ■ 
Edward  Leary 
George  Libby 
William  Branigan 
Edward  C.  O'Connell 

*Leo  Lynch 
Harold  F.  Milliken 


♦Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  C 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

1142 
1143 

W.  0.  Harrington 

John  Coleman 
*James  W.  Coleman 

1144 

(Third  Y 

Samuel  Hill 

ear  in  Parade) 

Louis  Bornstein 

1145 

Howe  &  Co. 

Edward  T.  Earle 

1146 

u         ..        u 

Alfred  Hoyle 

1147 

u            .<           .. 

Joseph  Fusoni 

1148 

.<   ,.  .. 

John  Sullivan 

1149 

"   "  " 

Patrick  Winters 

1150 

"   "  " 

William  F.  Dougher 

2 

1151 

*John  F.  Demone 

2 

1152 

(Fifth  Y 

Mahony's  Hyde  Park  Ex. 

5ar  in  Parade) 

*Charles  W.  Tolman 

1 

1153 

Dennis  Maloney 

Leo  P.  Maloney 

1 

1154 

(Third  \ 

McKee's  Hingham  Express 

ear  in  Parade) 

*Joseph  Murphy 

1 

1155 

Anthony  Mello 

Joseph  Dias 

1 

i^Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


148 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS  (Continued) 
DIVISION  C 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  o1 
Horses 


1156         Carmine  Mirabile 
1157 


Carmine  Mirabile 
Rocco  Romano 


1158         Morley's  Watertown  Express    Edward  F.  Morley 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


1159 

1160         Thomas  F.  Moroney 


1161  Michael  J.  Mulcahy 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1162  Manuel  F.  Munise 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 


1163  Nicola  Nardone 

1164  North  Shore  Express  Co. 
1165 

1166  "        ■   


Thomas  P.  Morley 
Anthony  J.  Dunleavey 
John  E.  Mulcahy 
*Joseph  L.  Martin 

Nicola  Nardone 
*Leonard  Colburn 
Robert  E.  Colburn 
William  J.  Murphy 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


149 


CLASS  53— EXPRESS 
DIVISION  D 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Association  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars  each,  the  money 
to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horses 

1167 

Michael  O'Leary 

Michael  O'Leary 

1 

11G8 

J.  H.Totcherkoff 

J.  H.  Potcherkoff 

1 

1169 

Charles  Rizzo 

Michael  Rizzo 

1 

1170 

Ryan  Transportation  Co. 

John  J.  Harrigan 

1 

1171 

-. 

James  Mullen 

1 

1172 

.< 

John  J.  McDonald 

2 

1173 

James  Sardina 

James  Sardina 

1 

1174 

Savage  Express  Co. 

Alfred  J.  McCormack 

1 

1175 

J.  E.  Billings                            (Muie)     1 

1176 

"         " 

Arthur  A.  Hicks 

1177  Sava-c&Son 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1178  G.  Scafidi 

nVilliam  D.  Higgins 
G.  Scafidi 

1179 

Schumann's  Express 

James  H.  O'Neil 

1180 

Scrafino  Semenza 

Scrafino  Semenza 

1181 

John  Schleicher 

John  A.  Fardy 

1182 

" 

Michael  Callahan 

1183 

(This  hor 

1184 

Timothy  Shtickrowe 

se  is  IS  years  old) 

John  Silva 

Michael  J.  Shuckrowe 
John  Silva 

1185 

Smith  Manchester  Express  Co 

.  Henry  Doherty 

1186 

Welch's  Medford  Express 

Francis  J.  Wright 

1187 

William  W.  Taylor 

Fred  Winslow 

1188 

u 

*George  Meehan 

2 

*linlitled  to  Driver'^  liadge 


150 


horse. 


CLASS  54— HUCKSTERS 

The  Dr.  A.  C.  Daniels  Company  offers  a  silver  cup  to  the  owner  of  the  best  huckster 

DIVISION  A 


The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  l^hird,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Chestnut  Hill  Horse  Show  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars 
each,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S    NAME 


DRIVER'S    NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1189  Anastopoulos  Bros. 

1190  Charles  Angelopoiilos 

1191  Peter  Apostolu 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1192  C.  Angello 

1193  George  Bisbikos 

1194  James  Biuker 

1195  George  G.  Bougopoulos 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1196  Michale  Cardinale 

1197  Nicholas  Chagaris 

1198  T.  Cbakonas  e^  Co. 


1199 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1200 


A.ron  I.  Cohen 


1201  John  T.  Coiley 

(Seventh  Year  in  Parade) 

1202  Angelo  Conaxis 

1203  Arthur  V.  Coughlin 
1 

'■'  .   1204         M.  J.  Coughlin 

1205  Harry  Cutler 

i       (Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1206  Peter  D.  Demakes 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1207  A.  P.  Dexter 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


1208 


Henry  D.  Ellis 


William  Anastopoulos 

Charles  Angclopoulos 

Philip  Cantale 

C.  Angello 

George  Bisbikos 

James  Biuker 
*Nicholas  C.  Bougopoulos 

Michale  Cardinale 

Nicholas  Chagaris 

Tassos  Voulgaris 
*John  Voulgaris 

Hynian  Cohen 
^William  J.  Coiley 

Angelo  Conaxis 

Arthur  V.  Coughlin 

M.  J.  Coughlin 

Harry  Cutler 

Peter  D.  Demakes 

A.  P.  Dexter 

Henry  D.  Ellis 


Kntillofl  to  I)i-;\or's  Badt:c 


151 


CLASS  54— HUCKSTERS 

DIVISION  B 

The  Judges   may   award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second   or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Chestnut  Hill  Horse  Show  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars 
each,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  Of 

Horses 


1209 


M.  Feinstein 


1210  John  Feroli 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade) 

1211  A.  J.  Floyd 

1212  "     " 

1213  John  W.  Garrick 

1214  Michael  D.  Geaney 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1215  Phillip  Green 

1216  John  J.  Harrington 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1217 

1218 
1219 
1220 
1221 
1222 
1223 

(Sixth  Year 


Samuel  A.  Harris 
Morris  Libberman 
Kiren  J.  Lowry 
Israel  Manosky 
Patrick  McGourty 
William  F.  McKinnon 
Daniel  McLaughlin 

in  Parade) 

1224  Meheones  Bros. 

1225  Mehos  Bros. 

1226  L.  J.  MulHn 

1227  "    " 

1228  Robert  Murphy 

1229  James  Nicholson 

1230  John  Nicholson 

1231  Thomas  Nicholson 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Mike  Williams 
John  Feroli 

Charles  W.  McHatton 
Leo  A.  Floyd 
Thomas  J.  Garrick 
Michael  D.  Geaney 

Arthur  H.  Belson 
John  J.  Harrington 

Samuel  A.  Harris 
Morris  Libberman 
William  Lowry 
Israel  Manosky 
Thomas  P.  McGourty 
Ralph  Merley 
John  P.  McLaughlin 

George  Meheones 
A.  Mehos 
James  F.  Murray 
William  J.  Mullin 
Daniel  J.  Murphy 
Walter  McCune 
Joseph  Nicholson 
Henry  McCue 


152 


CLASS  54— HUCKSTERS 
DIVISION  C 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,  Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 

In  addition,  the  Chestnut  Hill  Horse  Show  offers  five  special  prizes  of  Two  Dollars 
each,  the  money  to  go  to  the  driver. 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


No.  of 
Horses 


1232         Dennis  J.  O'Leary 

(Fifth  Year  in  Parade.     Tiiis  mare  is  23  years  old) 

1233 
1234 
1235 
1236 
1237 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1238  George  Poletes 

1239  John  Rodes 

1240  Myer  Ruchkofsky 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1241  John  Samelas 

1242  Joseph  Salter 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 


Philip  Opochinsky 
F.  H.  Parker 
Alvah  W.  Penny 
Albert  Piscatori 
Alfred  H.  Pigott 


1243 


Patrick  Shea 


1244  Silk  &  Albertson 

(Third  Year  in  Parade) 

1245  Mark  H.  Simonds 

(Sixth  Year  in  Parade) 

1246  David  Sontag 

(This  mare  was  a  patient  in  our  Free  Hospital) 

1247  Louis  Supo\'itz 

1248  Max  Susan 

1249  Paul  Symmos 

(Fourth  Year  in  Parade) 

1250  George  P.  Thomas 

1251  George  Vouchilas 

1252  Peter  Wolk 


Dennis  J.  O'Leary 
Philip  Opochinsky 
F.  H.  Parker 
AKah  W.  Penny 
Albert  Piscatori 
Alfred  H.  Pigott 
George  Poletes 
John  Rodes 
^Joseph  Ruchkofsky 
John  Samelas 
Michael  Satter 
Patrick  Shea 
*Simon  R.  Silk 
Mark  H.  Simonds 
David  Sontag 
Harry  Rosenthal 
Ralph  McEachern 
Paul  Symmos 
James  T.  Thomas 
George  Vouchilas 
Herman  H.  Wolk 


153 


*Entitled  to  Driver's  Badge 


CLASS  55— GAB  HORSES 

In  this  class  the  Judges  ma3^  award  such  a  ribbon  as  they  deem  to  be  deserved,  and 
a  prize  of  Three  Dollars,  if  the  entr\'  deserves  it.     No  shield  to  be  given  in  this  class. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 


No.  of 
Entry 


OWNER'S  NAME 


1253         Agel  Spiller  Co. 


DRIVER'S  NAME 


James  Collins 


No.  o1 

Horses 


CLASS  56— DEALERS'  HORSES 

The  Judges  may  award  such  ribbons,  First,   Second  or  Third,  as  they  deem  to  be 
deserved. 


No.  of 
Ribbon 

No.  of 
Entry 

OWNER'S  NAME 

DRIVER'S  NAME 

No.  of 
Horsks 

1254 

W.  Hurwitz 

2 

1255 

2 

1256 

H.  S.  Harris  &  Sons 

2 

1257 

"    "         "      "       " 

2 

1258 

■" 

2 

1259 

McKinney  Bros.  &  Co. 

1 

1260 

1 

1261 

2 

1262 

"                "      "     " 

2 

154 


STABLE  INSPECTION 


LIST  OF  FIRST  PRIZES,  STABLES,  FOREMEN  AND   NIGHTMEN 


Stables 

Arcade  Stable  (J.  Lewis  Johnson) 
Atwood  &  McManus 
Boston,  City  of 

Sanitary  Service,  No.  Grove  St. 

Sanitary  Service,  No.  Grove  St. 

Street  Cleaning  Service,  No.  Grove  St. 

Sewer  Service,  Gainsborough  St. 

Sanitary  Service,  Rutherford  Ave. 

Street  Cleaning  Service,  Rutherford  Ave. 

Paving  Service,  253  Medford  St.,  Charlestown 

Paving  Service,  521  Commercial  St. 

Sewer  Service,  Albany  St. 

Street  Cleaning  Service,  Albany  St. 

Hospital.  650  x'\lbany  St. 

Water  Works,  710  Albany  St. 

Sanitary  Service,  Albany  St. 

Sanitary  Service,  H  St.,  South  Boston 

Paving  Service,  1480  Columbia  Road,  South 
Boston 

Paving  Service,  Chestnut  Hill  Ave.,  Brighton 

Pa\"ing  Service,  Child  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 

Sewer  Service,  Child  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 
Sewer  Service,  Gibson  St.,  Dorchester 
Paving  Service,  Hancock  St.,  Dorchester 
Paving  Service,  Codman  St.,  Ashmont 
Cleaning  Service,  Highland  St..  Roxbury 
Paving  Service,  Highland  St.,  Ro.xbury 
Sanitary  Service,  Highland  St.,  Roxbur\- 
Paving  Service,  318  E.  Eagle  St.,  East  Boston 
Boston  Elevated  Railway: 
Gainsborough  St. 
Columbus  Ave.  and  Camden  St. 

Boston  Ice  Co.: 

Lamartine  St.,  Jamaica  Plain 

330  Rutherford  Ave.,  Charlestown 
292  Rutherford  Ave.,  Charlestown 
54  W.  First  St.,  South  Boston 

Boston  Blacking  Co. 

Boston  Consolidated  Gas  Co. 

Boston  «S:  Lockport  Block  Co. 

Carter's  Ink  Co. 

City  Fuel  Co. 

Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

Ferguson  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 

155 


Foremen 

Dennis  Mahoney 
Edgar  M.  Bryson 

James  E.  Burns 
Martin  Quirk 
Charles  Hobbs 
John  Flaherty 
Geo.  McColgan 
Jeremiah  J.  Leary 
Charles  Jacobs 
Chas.  F.  Caffrey 
Patrick  Barr\- 
William  Batts 
Patrick  O'Rourke 
Patrick  H.  Batts 
James  Flanagan 
James  Cassell 

Maurice  Fitzgerald 
James  McKenny 
James  Fitzgerald 
William  J.  Galvin 
Bernard  Brady 
Patrick  Thornton 
Martin  Norton 
Thomas  J.  Clark 
James  Shea 
William  Shaughnessey 
John  Gallagher 
Richard  O'Neil 

John  J.  Cushing 
Charles  Dillon 


Lewis  Smith 

Walter  Finley 
John  Hussey 
W.  E.  Hawley 
Nicholas  Ostcr,  Jr 
Jas.  Jennings 
S.  M.  Stuart 
Patrick  O'Brien 
Richard  J.  Austin 
Thos.  Scully 
Brigham  P.  Fay 
Peter  J.  F'reeh' 


NiGHTMEN 


Patrick  Griffin 
H.  McCarron 
M.  Mulvey 


Henrv  Minard 
A.  T.^  Flaherty 


John  Coonev 


John  Walsh 


Wm.  Gormley 
P.  Craven 
D.  Donlin 

Wm.  Johnson 
A.  Corbet t 


John  Doherty 


STABLE  INSPECTION  — Continued 

LIST  OF  FIRST  PRIZES,  STABLES,  FOREMEN  AND  NIGHTMEN— Continued 


Stables 

Fox  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 
Jos.  Gahm  &  Son 
Hunt-Spiller  Mfg.  Corp. 
Jordan  Marsh  Co. 
Kennett,  R.  A. 
Maiden  Electric  Co. 
N.  E.  Confectionery  Co. 

Pigott,  A.  H. 

Robinson,  A.  G. 

Stetson  Coal  Co. 

Tisdale,  Wilson  Co. 

D.  Whiting  &  Sons,*  570  Rutherford  Ave. 

J.  W.  Whitney 


Foremen 

J  as.  I.  Brooks 
Dennis  Healey 
John  J.McNamara 
M.  J.  Commins 
John  Gilpin 
Joseph  Reardon 
Henry  La  Croix 

A.  H.  Pigott 
John  Harrington 
Wm.  Hurst 
M.  J.  Shea 
Chas.  Sutton 
Ben  Ford 


NiGHTMEN 


A.  B.  Leigh  ton 
Patrick  Doyle 
Harry  Jordan 


LIST  OF  SECOND   PRIZES 


Stables 

Boston,  City  of 

Pa\ing  Service,  636  Albany  St. 
Boston  Elevated  Railway, Union  Square 
Boston  Ice  Co. : 

Farnham  and  Gerard  Sts. 
Bowen,  C. 
Bray,  W.  C. 
Cambridge  Gas  Co. 
Pilgrim  Laundrv  Co. 
Pratt  Bread  Co^ 
Simon  Bros. 
Standard  Charcoal  Co. 


Foremen 


Daniel  Anglin 
John  E.  Dempsey 

C.  C.  McLane 
Dan  Haley 
Everett  P.  Mclntyre 
Jeremiah  Mahoney 
E.  H.  Fairfield 
Wm.  J.  Regan 
Jos.  A.  Simons 
John  Byrnes 


NiGHTMEN 


M.  Buckley 


THE  SHIELDS 


The  shields  for  the  horses  are  awarded 
only  to  winners  of  blue  ribbons,  and  not 
to  them  in  certain  classes. 

To  avoid  delay  and  mistakes  the 
shields  will  not  be  given  out  until  the 
Monday  after  the  Parade. 


In  order  to  prevent  misuse  of  the 
shields  and  to  make  it  easier  to  recoAcr 
them  when  they  are  stolen,  the  Association 
will  retain  the  legal  title  to  them,  and  they 
will  be  regarded  as  lent,  instead  of  given 
awav. 


156 


QUALITY  IN  WORK-HORSES 


Our  judges  are  instructed  not  to  award 
blue  ribbons  or  first  prizes  to  any  horse,  no 
matter  how  good  his  condition,  unless  he  is 
a  horse  of  good  type  and  quality.  Quality, 
it  need  not  be  said,  is  just  as  important  in 
a  work-horse  as  in  a  race-horse.  Quality 
might  perhaps  be  described  as  that  fineness 
of  texture  which  good  breeding  produces. 

It  means  a  head  and  limbs  free  from 
"meat,"  tendons  well  defined, a  close-fitting, 
glove-like  skin,  hair  fine  and  silky,  and  a 
general  clean-cut,  high-bred  appearance. 

The  bone  in  a  well-bred  horse  is  more 
dense  and  less  brittle  than  the  bone  of  a 
coarse-bred  animal.  It  is  true,  of  course, 
that  well-bred  horses  are  sometimes  defi- 
cient in  quality,  but  no  horse  has  quality 
unless  he  is  well-bred.  The  horse  with 
quality  has  more  endurance,  and  he  is  less 
subject  to  disease  and  to  unsoundness  of 
feet  and  legs  than  is  the  low-bred  horse. 
Consequently  it  is  more  humane  to  use 
horses  with  quality  than  those  without 
quality. 

Quality  and  beauty  are  usually  found 
together,  and  yet,  as  all  horsemen  know, 
one  may  exist  without  the  other.  A  horse 
may  have  quality  without  being  in  the 
least  beautiful.  For  example,  he  may  have 
a   ewe   neck,   a  large   head,   long  ears,   a 


Roman  nose,  a  sway  back,  flat  sides,  slack 
loins,  calf-knees,  cow  hocks  and  a  rat  tail; 
and  yet  if  his  coat  is  short  and  silky,  if  his 
head  though  large  is  bony  and  well-cut,  if 
his  ears  though  long  are  well-shaped,  if  his 
legs  are  flat  and  clean,  and  if  his  hoofs  are 
of  fine,  close  texture,  then  the  horse  has 
quality.  Horses  of  the  Shire  and  Clyde 
breeds  often  look  coarse  at  first  sight  on 
account  of  their  Roman  noses  and  hairy 
legs,  but  in  the  best  specimens  of  these 
breeds,  the  long  hair  about  the  fetlock  is 
fine  and  silky,  and  their  heads,  though  not 
handsome,  are  clean-cut. 

In  many  large  stables,  where  horses 
have  been  bought  without  much  judg- 
ment, all  the  horses  may  be  divided  into 
two  distinct  types:  first,  the  well-bred, 
smooth-hipped,  fine-coated  type;  and  sec- 
ond, the  low-bred,  ragged-hipped,  coarse- 
haired  type.  The  horses  of  the  first  class 
will  look  fat  and  sleek,  whereas  the  horses 
of  the  second  type  will  look  thin  and  jaded, 
although  all  the  horses  do  the  same  amount 
of  work.  The  Old  Horse  Class  is  another 
illustration.  The  veteran  steeds  shown  in 
that  class  are  almost  invariably  horses  of 
quality.  They  represent  the  survival  of 
the  fittest;  and  the  fittest  are  the  well-bred 
ones. 


If); 


BULLETINS 

Copies  of  all  Bulletins  may  be  had  on  application 

NO.  1— WATERING  AND  BEDDING 

FIRST  ISSUED  IX  1<I0.) 


THE    WATERING    OF    HORSES    AT 
NIGHT 

In  most  cases  all  the  hay  which  horses 
in  the  city  receive  is  fed  to  them  at  night. 
It  is  therefore  especially  important  that 
they  should  be  watered  during  the  night. 
In  an  inspection  of  over  150  of  the  leading 
livery  and  boarding  stables  in  Boston  and 
the  vicinity,  particular  attention  was  paid 
to  this  matter.  All  authorities  agree,  and 
experience  teaches,  that  city  horses  should 
be  watered  between  8  P.  M.  (9  P.  M.  would 
be  better)  and  midnight;  but  it  was  found 
that  less  than  half  of  the  stables  visited 
give  their  horses  water  after  7  P.  M. 

And  yet  more  stablemen  volunteered  in- 
formation on  this  subject  than  upon  any 
other  matter  considered  in  the  five  months 
during  which  the  investigations  were  made. 
"  A  horse  comes  in  hungry,"  was  the  usual 
way  of  putting  it,  "  and  he  wants  his  sup- 
per so  much  that  he  will  drink  but  little; 
and  he  ought  not  to  drink  deeply  at  that 
time,  even  if  he  wants  to.  Then  he  eats 
a  quantity  of  dry,  heating  food.  He 
shouldn't  have  water  right  after  eating; 
but  if  he  doesn't  get  a  good  drink  two  or 
three  hours  later,  he  will  go  through  the 
night  thirsty,  and  the  heating  food  will 
burn  out  his  insides  for  the  lack  of  the 
water  that  is  needed  to  give  the  nourish- 
ment of  the  food  a  chance  to  do  the  good  it 
ought  to  be  doing."  Moreover,  a  horse  not 
watered  at  night  is  very  apt  to  drink  too 
much  in  the  morning. 

This  night-watering  is  not  only  common 
humanity  in  hot  weather,  but  it  is  almost 
equally  valuable  in  winter.  For  appetite 
comes  with  the  bracing  effect  of  cold 
weather,  and  horses  eat  more  than  they  do 
in  summer.  Consequently,  if  this  extra 
food  is  to  do  its  part  in  giving  the  horse 
power  to  resist  the  cold  and  the  strain  of 
winter  work,  water  must  be  given  at  the 
time  when  it  will  do  the  most  good,  which 
is,  in  most  cases,  between  8  and  10  P.  M., 


or  e\en  later.  Nothing  does  so  much 
toward  giving  back  a  return  for  the  food 
given  in  the  way  of  extra  strength,  working 
endurance  and  good  condition. 

The  effect  of  this  night-watering  on  the 
blood  and  general  circulation  is  far-reach- 
ing. The  thirst  that  follows  the  digestion 
of  a  meal  is  the  call  of  nature  for  the  water 
that  is  needed  to  help  the  good  of  the  food 
to  get  into  the  flesh  and  blood  of  the  ani- 
mal; and  equally  important  is  the  part 
played  by  the  water  in  sending  the  waste 
matter  out  of  the  body  with  the  least  pos- 
sible wear  and  tear  on  the  organs  that  per- 
form this  indispensable  duty.  A  horse  that 
remains  thirsty  all  night  cannot  be  ex- 
pected to  last  so  long  as  one  that  is  watered 
at  the  proper  time.* 

BEDDING  AND  REST 

There  were  twenty-five  horses  in  a  stable 
not  far  from  Boston  that  was  visited  one 
Sunday  morning.  The  horses  were  a  fair, 
average  lot  of  the  kind  used  in  delivery 
wagons  and  in  general  business.  Most  of 
them  were  in  reasonably  good  working 
order,  and  the  stable  had  the  appearance 
of  being  well-kept. 

Of  the  twenty-five  horses  in  the  stable 
twenty-four  were  standing  up,  and  just  one 
was    lying    down.     In    twenty-four    stalls 


*At  a  men's  club  near  Boston,  I  was  once  making 
an  address  about  horses,  in  the  course  of  which  I 
urged  the  necessity  of  night  watering.  A  man  in  the 
audience,  who  proved  to  be  the  night  watchman  in 
a  large  stable  near  by,  declared  that  he  knew  of  a 
stable  where  the  horses  were  not  watered  at  night, 
and  would  not  drink  even  if  they  had  the  opportu- 
nity. I  asked  his  permission  to  test  the  horses  in 
this  respect, and  we  went  to  the  stable  at  about  eleven 
o'clock.  There  were  twenty  horses,  and  we  unfas- 
tened them,  one  after  another,  so  that  they  could 
go  to  the  watering  trough  if  they  so  desired.  It  was 
a  bitterly  cold  night  in  midwinter,  but  of  the  twenty 
horses  all  but  one  drank,  and  several  drank  so  much 
that  I  feared  they  would  have  colic  in  consequence. 

—  H.  C.  iM. 


158 


there  was  no  bedding;  in  one  there  was  a 
good  supply.  One  doesn't  have  to  be  a 
wizard  to  guess  that  the  horse  that  was 
getting  a  needed  rest  was  in  the  same  stall 
with  the  bedding.  All  the  other  horses 
were  being  deprived  of  what  might  be  the 
best  part  of  their  Sunday,  namely,  the  op- 
portunity of  taking  their  weight  off  legs 
and  feet  that  usually  have  all,  and  more, 
than  they  can  do  to  stand  the  strain  of  the 
week-day  wear  and  tear. 

In  another  stable  there  is  a  horse  that 
works  in  a  single  grocery  wagon.  He  is 
between  the  shafts  three  days,  but  every 
fourth  day  remains  in  the  stable.  Each 
morning  brings  him  exactly  the  same 
breakfast,  and  there  is  absolutely  nothing 
in  the  care  given  that  tells  him  whether  he 
is  to  go  out  or  stay  in.  But  he  knows  how 
to  keep  his  own  calendar,  and  every  fourth 
morning,  just  as  soon  as  he  has  finished 
eating,  he  lies  down  in  comfort  on  the  plen- 
tiful supply  of  bedding  which  is  kept  under 
every  horse  in  that  stable  at  all  times;  and 
he  frequently  stays  down  the  better  part 
of  the  da>-. 

In  still  another  stable  there  are  pairs  of 
horses  that  are  used  half  a  day  and  rested 
the  other  half.  Encouraged  by  plenty  of 
bedding,  they  have  formed  habits  of  rest- 
ing their  legs  and  feet  at  every  possible 
opportunity. 

There  is  an  old  saying  that  a  good  city 
horse  could  use  up  four  sets  of  legs  and 
feet.     This  means  that  a  large  part  of  his 


bodily  strength  and  endurance  is  wasted 
because  lameness  and  suffering  wear  out 
the  unfortunate  animal  long  before  his 
time.  "  His  shoulders  is  all  gone  sa\in' 
his  legs,"  was  the  way  one  stableman  de- 
scribed the  condition  of  a  horse  that  had 
worked  his  body  muscles  to  pieces  in  trying 
to  ease  the  strain  of  his  battered  legs  and 
feet. 

As  in  the  case  of  watering  at  night,  the 
extra  expense  of  giving  a  day-time  bed  to 
a  horse  is  slight,  compared  with  the  great 
benefit  gained  from  the  rest  and  chance  for 
repairs  given  the  legs.  The  good  that 
comes  out  of  this  is  reflected  in  the  condi- 
tion of  the  whole  body;  and  all  who  own 
horses  should  see  that  this  chance  for 
needed  rest  is  given  their  horses  whenever 
they  are  in  the  stable,  A  horse  will  not  lie 
down  on  the  stable  planks  unless  worn  and 
weary  beyond  the  point  where  it  is  right  to 
use  any  animal. 

GILBERT  TOMPKINS,  Agent. 


Postscript.  During  the  past  two  years  six  or  eight 
owners  of  work-horses,  with  large  stables,  have,  at 
our  suggestion,  given  their  horses  a  good  bed  through 
the  day  on  Sundays;  and  in  each  case  they  report 
that  the  horses  take  advantage  of  it,  and  are  the 
better  for  it. 

The  horses  owned  by  William  Bradley,  the  famous 
New  York  contractor,  are  remarkable  for  lasting 
long,  and  in  Mr.  Bradley's  stables  the  horses  are 
always  watered  at  night,  after  eating  their  hay,  and 
they  are  at  all  times  particularly  well  bedded. 


159 


BULLETIN  No.  4 

VACATIONS  FOR  WORK-HORSES 

{Especially  from  the  Economic  Point  of  View) 
By  GILBERT  TOMPKINS  and  HENRY  C.  MERWIN 

(ABRIDGED) 


THE   EFFECT   OF   CITY   WORK   ON 
HORSES 

There  are  thousands  of  horses  hard 
at  work  in  cities  to-day  who  have  begun  to 
run  down  hill,  and  will  be  worthless  or 
nearly  so  within  a  year  or  two ;  and  yet  if 
these  horses  could  be  given  a  rest  and  a 
chance  to  recuperate,  they  would  in  six 
months'  time  be  worth  almost  as  much  as 
the  price  originally  paid  for  them. 

Work-horses  in  the  city,  if  worked  too 
hard  or  too  fast,  or  if  not  properly  cared 
for,  or  if  weakened  by  age,  deteriorate  in 
the  following  different  ways: 

(1)  They  become  thin. 

(2)  Their  feet  become  sore  or  diseased. 

(3)  They  become  grain-burnt  or  other- 
wise weakened  in  digestion. 

(4)  Their  muscles  become  tired  and 
strained. 

Let  us  take  these  up  in  their  order. 

(1)  The  first  symptom  of  age  in  a 
horse  is  apt  to  be  a  falling-off  in  flesh. 
Others  become  thin  from  having  a  bad 
driver,  or  from  being  over-hurried  in  their 
work,  or  from  poor  feeding.  A  short  rest 
will  often  do  wonders  for  a  horse  in  this 
condition. 

(2)  The  Feet. — Unquestionably  the 
best  way  to  make  a  horse's  feet  last  in  the 
city  is  to  shoe  him  with  rubber  or  leather 
pads  and  plenty  of  tar  and  oakum  under- 
neath. This  keeps  the  feet  soft,  and 
deadens  the  concussion.  But,  with  the 
best  of  shoeing,  horses'  feet  will  give  out 
on  the  pavements;  and  nothing  will  tend 
to  preserve  their  feet  more  than  an  occa- 
sional let-up  during  which  their  shoes  can 
be  removed,  their  feet  can  get  back  to  the 
ground,  their  heels  can  expand,  and  fever 
in  the  feet  may  be  reduced  by  the  moisture 
of  dew  and  wet  grass,  swampy  land,  etc. 

(3)  The  Grain-Burnt  Horse. — It 
must  be  remembered  that  a  horse  at  work 
in  the  city  is  not  in   a  normal    condition. 


The  constant  feeding  on  dry  food,  and  es- 
pecially on  such  stimulating  food  as  oats 
and  corn,  produces  an  unnatural  condi- 
tion of  the  blood.  His  whole  system 
becomes  feverish  and  abnormal  from  years 
of  high  graining  without  any  chance  to^get 
back  to  nature,  such  as  a  horse  gets  by 
being  turned  out  to  grass.  Everybody 
who  has  seen  a  horse  turned  loose  in  a  lot 
after  being  confined  in  a  stable  must  have 
observed  how  he  first  paws  up  a  little  turf 
with  his  forefoot,  and  thus  gets  at  the  earth 
underneath.  He  is  more  anxious  to  eat 
this  earth  than  to  eat  the  grass,  and  it  is 
certain  that  the  earth  is  wholesome  for  the 
horse.  It  has  a  cleansing  effect,  and  is  a 
cure  for  worms.  Nothing,  in  short,  is  so 
good  for  the  digestion  of  a  horse,  especially 
after  long  years  of  confinement  in  a  stable 
and  high  feeding,  than  an  opportunity  to 
eat  grass  and  earth. 

(4)  Tired  Muscles. — Not  everybody 
realizes  that  a  horse,  to  the  eye,  may  be 
in  perfect  condition,  and  yet  his  muscles 
may  be  so  tired  and  strained  that  move- 
ment is  positively  painful  to  him,  and  any 
movement  but  a  slow  one  almost  impos- 
sible. Work-horses  and  hack-horses  in 
this  condition  are  often  seen  in  the  street, 
especially  when  they  begin  to  grow  old. 
These  horses  look  fairly  fat  and  sleek,  but 
they  are  tired,  their  heads  droop,  they  have 
no  life  and  they  lack  energy  and  quickness 
of  movement.  Nothing  but  a  rest  will 
restore  these  horses;  but  a  rest  of  a  few 
months  will  do  it,  and  it  will  increase  their 
value  at  least  one-half.  The  writers  of 
this  Bulletin  remember  seeing  a  horse  used 
by  a  rural  free  delivery  mail-carrier  that, 
being  naturally  a  good  feeder,  and  having 
all  the  grain  that  he  could  eat,  was  in  fine 
bodily  condition;  but  he  did  double  the 
work  of  an  ordinary  horse,  that  is,  he 
travelled  twenty-three  miles  a  day  for  six 
days  in  the  week,  and  he  was  so  tired  and 
stiff  that  it  was  difficult  to  urge  him  from 


ItiO 


a  walk  into  a  trot.  It  is  from  this  stiffen- 
ing of  the  muscles  that  a  horse  really  grows 
old,  and  if  the  muscles  are  restored  by  an 
annual  vacation  the  useful  life  of  the  horse 
will  be  extended  to  an  astonishing  degree. 


A  VACATION  AT  HOME 

Many  stables,  especially  truck-horse 
stables,  are  so  situated  that  a  horse  can  lie 
given  a  very  good  vacation  without  send- 
ing him  away.  That  is,  there  is  a  yard 
connected  with  the  stable  where  the  horse 
can  be  turned  loose  in  fine  weather,  with 
his  shoes  off.  His  feed  should,  of  course, 
be  changed  to  meet  the  changed  condition 
of  his  life.  His  oats  should  be  reduced  at 
least  one-half,  but  always  according  to  the 
age  of  the  horse,  and  plenty  of  bran  should 
be  given  to  him,  with  carrots,  turnips  and 
other  vegetables,  and,  if  possible,  some 
grass,  now  and  then,  sent  in  from  neigh- 
boring farms.  In  this  way  the  horse  can 
derive  pretty  nearly  all  the  benefits  of  a 
vacation  in  the  country  without  the  ex- 
pense of  sending  him  away,  and  without 
separating  him  from  his  well-known  and 
beloved  companions. 


A  VACATION  IN  THE  COUNTRY 

It  is  hardly  necessary  to  say  that  the 
greatest  care  should  be  taken  in  selecting 
the  farm  where  the  horse  is  to  be  turned 
out  for  a  rest.  Few  farmers  know  how  to 
care  for  a  horse,  or  will  take  any  trouble 
to  make  him  comfortable.  It  must  be 
remembered,  of  course,  that  the  city  horse, 
being  used  to  high  feed,  cannot  have  all 
his  grain  taken  away  from  him,  especially 
if  he  be  an  old  horse,  without  falling  into 
a  worse  condition  than  his  former  one. 
Unless  he  is  a  young  horse  in  rich  pasturage, 
he  must  receive  some  grain  every  day,  and 
the  old  horse  will  need  a  good  deal,  per- 
haps one-half  of  his  usual  ration. 

Another  thing  to  be  looked  out  for  is  the 
annoyance  from  flies  and  mosquitoes. 
This  is  so  great,  except  in  farms  situated 
on  high  ground,  that  a  horse,  especially  a 
city  horse,  cannot  be  turned  out  all  day  or 


even  all  night  in  a  pasture  or  field  without 
losing  more  than  he  would  gain.  In  pas- 
tures of  northern  New  England,  where  the 
land  lies  high  and  the  nights  are  cool, 
horses  can  be  turned  out  day  and  night; 
but  within  thirty  or  fifty  miles  of  Boston, 
in  midsummer,  there  is  hardly  more  than 
an  hour  or  so  in  the  whole  twenty-four 
hours,  when  a  horse  can  be  turned  out 
without  being  driven  almost  crazy  by  flies 
in  the  daytime  and  mosquitoes  at  night. 

VACATION  BY  PIECEMEAL 

One  way  of  giving  a  horse  a  vacation 
is  to  increase  the  number  of  horses  at 
work,  for  any  firm  or  concern,  so  as  to 
permit  each  horse  to  lay  off  one  day  out 
of  the  six  working  days,  or  to  work  half 
a  day  only  for  one  or  more  working  days 
in  the  week.  For  example,  suppose  a 
given  concern  has  work  enough  to  keep 
four  three-hundred-dollar  horses  busy.  Let 
them  add  one  horse  to  the  equipment,  so 
that  there  will  be  five  horses  for  the  work. 
This  would  relieve  toil-worn  legs  and  feet 
and  over-strained  bodies  and  digestion, 
would  lessen  somewhat  the  amount  of 
grain  required  for  each  horse,  and  would 
greatly  reduce  the  annual  depreciation 
in  the  value  of  each  horse.  In  this  way, 
it  is  speaking  within  bounds  to  say,  that 
the  working  life  of  all  the  horses  would 
be  prolonged  from  an  average  of  six  years 
to  an  average  of  ten  years. 

It  should  be  remembered  also  that  a 
horse  in  good  condition  and  spirits  is  far 
more  efficient,  and  will  get  over  far  more 
ground  in  a  day,  than  one  that  is  jaded 
or  stiff  from  overwork;  and  besides,  the 
good,  active  horse  tends  to  make  the 
driver  a  better  and  more  efficient  employee. 

Another  consideration  is  the  ad\ertising 
value  of  a  good  horse  in  good  condition  and 
spirits.  This  increases  every  year,  and  in 
cities  where  work-horse  parades  are  held 
it  increases  very  fast.  Customers  look 
more  and  more  at  the  horse  used,  directly 
or  indirectly,  in  supplying  their  wants, 
and  a  fine  horse  gives  an  appearance  of 
success  and  up-to-dateness  that  is  worth 
much  more  than  it  costs. 


161 


APPENDIX 


TESTIMONY  AS  TO  VACATIONS 
FOR  WORK-HORSES 

A  large  bakery  concern  in  Boston,  the 
George  G.  Fox  Co.,  says: — 

"  Our  system  is  to  give  each  of  our 
horses  two  weeks  at  pasture  every  year, 
sending  them  four  at  a  time  while  the 
season  lasts.  We  are  well  pleased  with 
the  results." 


EXPERIENCE    OF  A  LEADING  TRUCKMAN 

(Letter  to  the  President  of  the  Boston  Work-Horse 
Parade  Association.) 

Boston,  May  1.5,  lOlL 
Dear  Sir: — 

I  write  this  letter  to  call  your  attention  to  a 
gray  mare,  stone  blind,  which  we  worked  in  our 
business  for  fourteen  years.  When  she  had  been 
worked  for  about  twelve  years,  she  seemed  to  have 
a  general  breakdown,  and  about  that  time  you  and 
I  had  a  conversation  in  regard  to  "  reconstructed 
horses,"  and  you  advised  me  to  give  this  mare 
two  months'  lay-off  and  see  what  effect  it  would 
ha\e.  I  followed  your  instructions — we  have  a 
large  yard — and  this  mare  was  turned  out  every 
day,  and  most  of  the  time  we  hired  a  boy  to  take 
her  out  and  give  her  some  grass.  In  two  months' 
time  she  came  back  perfectly  well  and  seemingly 
as  good  as  ever.  We  worked  her  for  about  two 
years  from  that  time,  and  then  we  pensioned  her 
and  sent  her  to  a  farm. 

We  have  done  this  same  thing  with  three  others, 
and  one  of  these  was  run  down  so  badly  that  our 
veterinary  surgeon  advised  me  to  have  him  killed. 
He  declared  that  one  of  this  horse's  lungs  was  nearly 
gone,  and  thought  he  was  not  worth  one  dollar. 
We  had  used  this  horse  for  about  eight  years,  and 
concluded  that  we  would  try  giving  him  a  rest. 
After  three  months'  rest  he  was  one  of  the  hand- 
somest horses  in  Boston,  and  he  remained  so  for 
about  two  years,  and  last  year  was  shown  with  the 
"  reconstructed  horses'"  in  the  Work-Horse  Parade. 
This  year  he  died  of  blackwater  on  account  of  his 
being  so  fleshy. 


Our  experience  simply  shows  that  your  idea  of 
a  vacation  for  horses  that  are  run  down  is  correct, 
and  I  hope  that  many  other  horse  owners  will  make 
the  same  experiment.  The  results  I  have  no  ques- 
tion in  regard  to. 

Very  truly  yours, 

WM.  D.  QUIMBY. 

THE  EXPERIENCE  OF  AN  EXPRESSMAN 

"  This  horse  went  to  pieces  after  eight  years  of 
city  deli^'ery  work,  and  wasn't  worth  anything. 
When  he  came  to  us,  his  legs  were  swollen,  kidneys 
weak,  one  lung  going,  and  the  other  almost  gone. 
He  couldn't  even  go  down  an  easy  incline  without 
stopping  and  struggling  for  breath.  He  was  given 
some  physic,  and  then  laid  off  for  the  summer.  We 
hired  boys  to  lead  him  (and  other  horses)  in  the 
grass  of  some  open  lots  while  the  dew  was  on  it,  and 
let  them  graze  afternoons.  We  gave  this  horse 
the  freedom  of  the  barn  and  the  yard,  and  after  a 
while  he  began  stealing  the  other  horses'  feed  on 
his  own  account.  He  finally  filled  out  and  improved 
so  much  that  I  took  him  for  my  own  use.  Now  he 
feels  so  well  that  he  won't  even  walk  up  hill.  He's 
also  a  little  on  the  alarm-clock  pattern;  when  he 
stands  in  front  of  the  office  evenings,  you  have  to 
tie  him  a  little  before  six  o'clock,  or  he  will  go  home 
to  supper  and  the  stable  of  his  own  notion." 


OPEN  BRIDLES 

The  M.  S.  P.  C.  A.  offers  a  prize  of 
$5  for  the  driver  of  every  six-horse  team, 
and  of  $4  for  the  driver  of  every  four- 
horse  team,  whose  horses  wear  open 
bridles  in  the  Parade,  provided  that  the 
driver  agrees  to  use  the  open  bridles  for 
at   least   two  months. 


CORRECTION 

The  name  of  one  of  our  most  highly- 
\alued  Judges,  James  J.  Connors,  was 
accidentally  omitted  from  the  list  of 
Judges.     . 


1(52 


The  Ashtpn  Lawrence  Free  Hospital 
for  Horses 


Conducted  by  the  Association  which  holds  this 
Parade,  at  78  Northampton  Street.  Telephone, 
Roxbury  1476-W.  Chief  Veterinary  Surgeon,  Dr. 
Frank  J.  Sullivan  of  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 
Foreman,  James  McCarthy.  This  is  a  Hospital  for 
the  horses  of  poor  men,  and  there  is  no  charge  for 
board  or  treatment.  For  information  apply  at  our 
office,  15  Beacon  Street. 

Any  veterinary  surgeon  may  send  a  horse  here, 
at  any  time,  without  notice,  and  may  treat  the 
horse  in  the  Hospital  or  have  him  treated  by  the 
hospital  staff,  as  the  veterinary  surgeon  prefers. 

VISITORS  ARE  WELCOME  AT  ALL 
TIMES. 

The  Hospital  serves  also  as  a  receiving  station 
for  lost  or  abandoned  dogs  and  cats,  which  are 
called  for  every  day  by  the  Animal  Rescue  League. 

The  Hospital  is  supported  wholly  by  contri- 
butions.   It  will  be  a  permanent  institution. 


163 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS 


Abrams,  Mver  CO 

56 

Eastern  Oil  &  Rendering  Co. 

94 

Acton  Farms  Milk  Co. 

90 

Eastern  Storage  Co. 

82 

American  Coal  Co 

60 

Eddy,  C.  F.  Co 

58 

American,  The  Agricultural  Chemical  Co. 

102 

Eddy,  LeaceW 

92 

46 

Eldridge  Baker  Co.  . 
Elm  Farm  Milk  Co. 

46 

48 

.At  wood  &  Mc  Ma  nils 

42 

Empire  Grocery  Co 

110 

Bahcock,  E.  J 

Babcock,  Frank  M 

74 
88 
66 

Fells  Ice  Co 

Ferguson  Bakery  ((General  Baking  Co.) 

114 

Badger,  E.  B.  &  Sons  Co. 

96 

88 

Forgie's,  James,  Sons 

58 

Baker,  Walter  &  Co.,  Limited    

Barr^•,  The  Building  Wrecking  Co. 

Bartiett,  A.  J 

Bav  State  Clean  Towel  Co. 

62 
62 

88 

44 

Fox  Bakery  (General  Baking  Co.) 
Frediani,  M.  &  Son    "  

92 

48 

48 

Freedman,  I.  &  Co 

76 

Bav  View  Bottling  Co. 

96 

Bellevue  Hotel 

68 

Benson  Bros 

..  98 

Gahm,  Joseph  &  Son   . 

72 

Bicchieri,  Antonio  &  Co 

Blake,  Frank  R.  Supply  Co. 

38 

72 

108 

Glynn,  M.  H.  &  Co. 

34 

Blinn,  Morrill  &  Co 

82 

Greene  Bros.  &  Co 

62 

Boston  Badge  Co 

112 

Boston  Forge  Co 

76 

Boston  Live  Poultry  Co 

86 

Handschumaker  &  Co. 

110 

Boston  Industrial  Home,  Inc. 

80 

Hanson,  John  A 

74 

Bowen,  C 

60 

Harris'  Sons,  Henry  S 

54 

Boyd  Brockton  Transportation  Co.       • 

88 

Harris,  Ralph  &  Co 

60 

Breck,  Jos.  &  Sons,  Corp. 

82 

Harvard  Grocery  &  Pro\i-ion  Co. 

110 

Brigham,  C.  Co 

48 

Heme,  J.  F.  Co 

70, 

Brighton  Public  Market 

78 

Higgins,  W.  J.  &  Co.   . 

86 

Brockwav,  L.  H 

64 

112 

Hill  &  Hill 

100 

Brockwav-Smith  Corp.    . 

Hill,  Smith  &  Co 

106 

Buck,  C.  H.  &Co 

76 

Houghton  &  Dutton 

90 

Hoyey,  H.  A.  &  Co 

108 

Howard,  G.  B.  &  Co 

70 

Hunt-Spiller  Manufacturing  Co 

92 

Caldwell,  J.  &  Co. 

52 

Hunter,  J.  B.  Co 

104 

Campbell,  Thomas 

110 

Capozzoli   L.  &  Co. 

104 

Chase,  L.  C.  &  Co 

94 
102 
104 

60 

Jenks,  The  H.  F.  Inc. 

Jenness  &  Co 

Johnson,  C.  S 

Johnson,  H.  A.  Co 

42 
84 

102 

112 

Chelsea  Iron  &  Coal  Co 

Christie,  R.  C 

City  Fuel  Co 

Citv  Laundry  Co.  . 

Coi'ley,  John'T 

28 
110 

J;>rdan  Marsh  Co 

64 

Cole,  B.  S 

112 

Coleman  Bros 

50 

Kelly  Peanut  Co.,  The 

98 

Commonwealth  Hospital  

92 

Kennett,  R.  A 

36 

Kilduff,  John  T. 

110 

Knight,  A.  W 

104 

l>(,ari  orn  (Grocery  Co 

Deerfoot  Farms  Dairy  

108 

Krauss  William 

102 

68 

Di  Pietro  Bros.  &  Marini 

106 

Dohertv  &  Daly   

92 

Leavens,  William  &  Co 

46 

74 

Libby  &  Huckins    

98 

Douglass,  J.  M 

96 

Libby  Ice  Cream  Co. 

78 

Dover  Stamping  and  Mnnufacti-ring  Co. 

76 

Little,  Brown  &  Co 

86 

Driscoll,  J.C 

102 

Locke  Coal  Co 

70 

Drake  Bro^^.  Co.                      

66 

London  Harness  Co. 

86 

nininhv.  W.  F.                        

106 

Lorine,  I.  &  Co. 

44 

164 


LIST  OF  ADVERTISERS— Continued 


Maiden  Eleclrlc  Co.  and  Maiden  &  Melrose  Cas 

Light  Co 96 

Marine  Ofilice  Towel  Supply  Co.  :          .102 

Marston,  R.  Co 84 

McCarthy,  F.  J.  &  Co 104 

McCarthy,  J.  L 98 

McKinnon  &  McKenzio  104 

McKinnon,  William  F.  106 

McKinney  Bros.  &  Co.  78 

Merrifield&Co 98 

Metropolitan  Coal  Co.  30 

Moore,  F.  L.  &  Co 96 

Moroney,  T.  F 82 

Moulton&  Holmes   108 

Moxie,  TheCo 58 

National  Casket  Co 110 

Neapolitan  Ice  Cream  Co.  82 

New  England  Confecrioncr\  (  •  .  36 


Pastene,  P.  &  Co 

Phelps  Bros.  Co. 
Pierce,  S.  S.  Co. 
Pilgrim  Laundry  Co. 

Plakias.  W 

Plant,  Thomas  G.  Co. 
Pureoxia  Co.,  The  . 


96 

104 
24 

.    40 

74 

Opposite  16 
.  44 


Sampson  iX:  C(jlcman    

Sansone,  A 

Savage  &  Son 

Savoy  Wine  cS:  Importing  ( 

Shapieigh  Coffee  Co 

Shattuck  &  Jones,  Inc. 

Silk&  Albertson 

Simon  Bros 

Smith,  C.  B.  &Br'. 

Smith,  D.  A.  Co 

Snow  &  Parker   . 
Standard  Charcoal  L    . 

Star  Brewi  ng  Co 

Stetson  Coal  Co.,  The 

Stone,  W.  P.  &  Co 

Stucklen,   Paul  Co 

Sullivan,  J.  H.  Co 

Svlva  &  Silva 


Talbot,  J.  C 

Taylor  Bros.  Laundrx',  Inr. 
The  Hub  Shoeing  F"orge 

Thorndike  Stables 

Thurlow,  R.  F 

Timberlake  &  Small  

Tisdale,  Wilson  Co 

Toomey  &  Ormon  .  

Tremont  Co-operati .  -j  Market 

Turner  Centre  Dairying  Association 


.100 
102 
112 
102 
.  92 
.  50 
108 
106 
.  70 
112 
114 

68 
.  80 
.  88 

54 
114 
.78 
.  74 

.100 
.  66 
.  60 

106 

94 

.  68 

80 

108 
.  54 
.  46 


Quinb\-,  W.  S.  Co. 


94 


Red  Acre  Farm  

Rescue  IMission  Wood   and  Cnr 

Revere    House    

Rhodes  Bros.  Co. 
Rich,  E.  A.  Co. 
Rich,  Frederick  I.. 
Richardson,  J.  H. 
Robinson,  W.  M. 

Roessle,  The  Brewery 

Rowe,  A.  A.  &  Son  Co 

Ryan  Transportation  Co 


^'ard 


.  40 

76 

110 

106 

114 

108 

62 

114 

52 

62 

84 


Walton  Lunch  Co 

Ward,  N.  Co 

Warren,  F.  C.  &  Bradford  Co. 

Waterhouse,  L.  A 

Waters,  John  H.  &  Cc. 

White,  John  J 

Whiting,  D.  &  Son,< 
Whitney,  John  W. 
Wilkinson,  A.  I. 

Wilson,  F.  E.  .■ 

Woodberry.  D.  S.  &  Co. 
Woodberry  Press,  The.. 


Xtravim  Molasses  Feed  Co. 


114 

70 
.  48 

94 
.  84 
.104 

32 
106 

98 
.  94 
.  54 
.  56 


26 


165 


INDEX  TO  CLASSES 


'  I>.  -     1.  Fire  Department 

"2.  Police  Department 

'A.  I'nited  States  Letter  Carriers 

4.  I  nited  States  Parcel  Post 

.").  I'nited  States  Mail  Wagons 

li.     City  of  Boston— Public     Works     Dci^t. 
Mare  and  Foal 

■  7.         Public     Works      Dept. 

Old  Horses 

•        N.  Public    Works    Dept. 

Foremen's  Driving 
Horses 

■  !••         •■     ■•  '■  Public    Works    Dept. 

Bridge  Di\ision 

•10.         Public    Works    Dept. 

Paving  Division 

■  11.         ■•     '■         "  Public   Works   Dept. 

Street  Cleaning  Div. 

"    12.         Public   W'orks    Dept. 

Street  Watering  and 
Oiling  Div. 

'■     VA.         '■     ■'         "  Public   Works    Dei)t. 

Water  Division 

■■     11.         Public    Works    Dept. 

Sewer  Service 

'■     I''.         Public   Works    Dept. 

Sanitary  Service,  Al- 
bany Street 

■  !i'.         Public   Works    Dept. 

Sanitary    Service, 
North  Grove  Street 

■■     17.  Public  Works    Department,   ^\iffoIk   Co. 

]S.  Farmers  and  Market  Gardeners 

19.  Deliveries,  Newspapers 

"    20.  Milk 

'•    21.  Bakers 


2.').  Deliveries,  Miscellaneous 

24.  Deliveries,  Department  Stores 
'2r>.  Furniture  Makers  and  Movers 
2(i.  Pnjvisions,  Light  Horses 

27.  Provisions,  Heavy  Horses 

25.  Confectioners 
20.  ( '.rocers 

30.  Pulilic  Service  Corporations 


Class 


44. 
45. 
40. 
47. 

4S. 


Manufacturers 

Builders  and  Dealers  in  Building  Material 
Metals  and  Junk 

Bottlers,  Wine  Dealers  and  Brewer.- 
Hay  and  Grain 
Lumber 
Ice 

Contractors 
Coke  and  Charcoal 
Coal 

Truckmen 

Owners'  and  Foremen's  Runabouts 
Four-Horse      Teams      (Lawrence      Gold 
Medal) 

CHAMPIONSHIP  CLASSES 

Singles — Light  Horses 

"     — Middleweight  Horses 
Doubles — Middleweight  Horses 
Singles — Heavy  Horses 
Doubles — Heavy  Horses 


.V,. 


Old  Horses 
Div  ision  A 

B 

C 

D 

E 
Championship,  Old  Horses 
Reconstructed  Horses 
Barrel  Racks 
P-x  press 
Division  A 

B 

C 

D 
Hucksters 
Division  A 

B 

C 
Cab  Horses 
i:)ealers'  Hor.ses,  Singles  and  Doublet 


166 


LIST  OF  CONTRIBUTORS 


A.  !•:.  L). 

Ayassiz,  R.  L. 

Allen,  C.  W". 

Allen,  Frank  E. 

Allen,  Mrs.  S.  S. 

American     Humane     Education 

Societ>- 
Ames,  Mrs.  William  H. 
Angell,  Mrs.  George  T. 
Animal  Rescue  League 
Ancinymmis 

Bacon,  Miss  M.  P. 
Barbour  Stockwell  Co. 
Bartlett,  X.  S. 
Bartol,  Dr.  J.  W. 
P>eebe,  E.  Pierson 
Beech,  Mrs.  Herbert 
Blake,  Mrs.  Arthur  W. 
Blake,  Miss  Marion  L. 
Boit,  Mrs.  R.  A. 
Bossert,  Miss  Annie 
Boston  Ice  Co. 
Brackett,  Mrs.  J.  Lewis 
Bragdon,  J.  \V.  &  Co. 
Brandegee,  Mrs.  M.  B. 
BuUard,  Miss  Katherine  E. 
liullard,  Mrs.  William  S. 
Burclctt,  E.  W. 
Burr,  Mrs.  H.  M. 
Butler,  Mrs.  C.  M. 

Cabot,  Mrs.  A.  T. 
Cambridge  Gas  Light  Co. 
Campbell,  C.  A. 
Carr,  Samuel 
Carter's  Ink  Co. 
CMiase,  Alfred  E. 
Chase,  Mrs.  Theodore 
Chestnut  Hill  Horse  Show 
Clapp,  Mrs.  W.  W. 
Clarke,  Eliot  C. 
Clarke,  Henry  M. 
Clarke,  Miss  Lillian  F. 
Clarke,  Miss  Martha  A. 
Clementson,  Mrs.  Sydney 
Cotton,  Miss  Eva  M. 
Crafts,  Miss  Clemencc 
Cram,  R.  A. 
Crane  Co. 
Curtis,  Miss  Evelyn 


Daniels,  Dr.  A.  C.  Co. 
Daniels.'Miss  Gertrude  C. 
Davenport,  Mrs.  E.  W. 
Day,  Mrs.  Frank  A. 
Demos,  William 
Dennie,  Miss  Mary  H. 
Derby,  Roger 
Devlin,  Mrs.  John  E. 
Dexter,  Gordon 
Di  Napoli,  P. 
Dodd,  Miss  Ethel 
Dodd,  Mrs.  Henry  W. 
Douglas,  Miss  Elizabeth  P. 
Dunbar,  W.  D. 

Eaton,  The  Misses 
Eaton,  Miss  Julia  F. 
Edd\-,  Leace  W. 
Evans,  Mrs.  Robert  D. 

Farmer,  Mrs.  E.  S. 
Farnsworth,  Mrs.  Lucy  H. 
Faxon,  Miss  Florence  M. 
Fearing,  Mrs.  Mary  P. 
Fis^h,  Frederic  P. 
Fisher,  Miss  Annie  E. 
Folsom,  Miss  M.  G.  S. 
Foote,  Mrs.  Arthur 
Forbes,  J.  Murray 
Foster,  Augustus  C. 
Foster,  Mrs.  Reginald 
Fox,  The  Misses 
Fox,  Mrs.  G.  (,. 
Friend,  A 

Fries,  Miss  Anna  M. 
Frothingham,  Mrs.  Edward 
Frothingham,  Mrs.  J. 

Galacar,  Mrs.  F.  R. 
(ja\-,  Mrs.  Josephine  S. 
Gilman,  O.  B. 
(ioddard.  Miss  Julia 
Gray,  Mrs.  Hollis  E. 
Greene,  J.  M. 
Grew,  Edward  W. 

Hall,  George  G. 
Harrington,  George  W. 
Haskell,  Allen 
Hathaway,  Miss  J.  F. 
Hayes,  Miss  Mary  H. 
Haynes,  Miss  E.  C. 


Hemenway,  Augustus 

Hittinger,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jacoli 

Holmes,  J.  A.  &  Co. 

Hood,  Miss  Helen 

Hooper,  Mrs.  A.  W. 

Howard,  Miss  Pauline  S. 

Howe,  Albert  E. 

Howe  &  Co. 

Hoyt,  Mrs.  Frank  C. 

Hudson,  Mrs.  John  E. 

Hunt,  Mrs.  David 

Hunt,  William  D. 

Hurd,  Miss  Elizabeth 

Hutchins,  Miss  Harriet 

lasigi.  Miss  Nora 

In  Memory  of  "A.  K."     ' 

Jackson,  Miss  Marion  C. 
Jacques,  Herbert 
Jarves,  Miss  Florence 
Johnson,  Miss  Abbie  F. 

Keith's  Theatre,  B.  F. 
Kendall,  The  Misses 
Kennedy,  Miss  Louise  E. 
Kidder,  Mr.  &  Mrs.  Charles  A. 

Lander,  Miss  L.  A. 

Lang,  Mrs.  B.  J. 

Lang,  Miss  Margaret  R. 

Latimer,  Mr.  &  Mrs.  George  D. 

Lawrence,  Mrs.  A.  A. 

Lawrence,  John 

Lawrence,  Miss  Madeline 

Lee,  Joseph 

Logan,  Miss  E.  D. 

Loring,  Miss  Harriet  E. 

Loring,  Miss  Helen 

Loring,  Mrs.  Thacher 

Lover  of  Animals 

Lovett,  Miss  Eleanor  H. 

Lowell,  Miss  Georgiana 

Manning,  Miss  A.  F. 
Marble,  Miss  Marjorie 
Mason,  Miss  E.  F. 
Mason,  Miss  Ida  M. 
Massachusetts  S.  P.  C.  A. 
Masters,  E.  C. 
May,  Miss  Eleanor  G. 


167 


LIST  OF  CONTRIBUTORS— Continued 


.McConndl,  Mrs.  C.  W. 
-McLathlan,  Henry  A. 
-McLellan,  Mrs.  Jcanctte  K. 
•  M.  E.  E." 
Mellen,  C.  S. 
Millard,  Mrs.  A. 
Mitchell,  Alfred  Y. 
Moors,  Mrs.  Francis  J. 
M orison,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Morse,  Miss  Emma  E. 
Morse,  John  T.,  Jr. 
Alorse,  Miss  Mary  Minns 
jMorse,  Dr.  Henry  Lee 
Moseley,  Miss  Ellen  F. 
Moulton,  Mrs.  Paul 
Munroe,  Miss  E.  F. 
Murphy,  Mrs.  Ellen  L. 

Xew  England  Telephone  and  Tele- 
graph Co. 

<  )riental  Tea  Co. 
■'  Ormonde  " 

"P.  F.  C." 

Page,  Dr.  Calvin  G. 

Parker,  Francis  S. 

Parker,  Mrs.  William  L. 

Parsons,  The  Misses 

Peabody,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Francis 


Peabody,  Philip  G. 
Pickman,  D.  L. 
Pierce,  S.  S.  Co. 
Pillsbury,  A.  E. 
Pfaff,  Charles 

R.,  Mrs.  W.  B. 
Rackemann,  Charles  S. 
Red  Acre  Farm 
Richardson,  Dr.  W.  L. 
Rodman,  Miss  Emma 
Rosenbaum,  Miss  Fannie  L. 

Saltonstall,  Richard  M. 
Sampson,  Miss  Lucy 
Sands,  Mrs.  William  H. 
Sawyer,  Clifford  D. 
Sawyer,  Mis,s  Mary  T. 
Shattuck,  Dr.  George  B. 
Sheldon,  Mrs.  Frank 
Small,  Miss  Cora 
Spaulding,  Miss  Dora  X. 
Sprague,  Dr.  F.  P. 
Stackpole,  Miss  Roxana 
Staniford,  Mrs.  Daniel 
Stearns,  Miss  Irene 
Steele,  Miss  Caroline  B. 
Stone,  C.  A. 
Storer,  Miss  Elizabeth  W. 


^torer,  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Sturgis,  Mrs.  Robert  S. 
Swan,  Mrs.  F.  Winthrop 
Swift,  Henry  W. 

Thacher,  Miss  Lillian  C. 
Thayer,  Mrs.  Ezra  R. 
Tyson,  Mrs.  George 

Wadsworth,  Mrs.  W.  Austin 
Walker,  Miss  Elizabeth 
Ward,  Miss  Elizabeth  J. 
Washburn,  Mrs.  A.  L. 
Watson,  Joseph  A. 
Wellington,  Mrs.  H.  W. 
Wheelwright,  Miss  Mary  C. 
Whidden,  Miss  Eleanor 
White,  Mrs.  Charles  T. 
White,  Miss  Gertrude 
White,  R.  H.  &  Co. 
Wigglesworth,  George 
Willard,  Mrs.  J.  D. 
Williams,  Ralph  B. 
Wilson,  Miss  Edith  C. 
Wilson,  Miss  Helen  L. 
Wood,  Miss  Annie  L. 
Worthington,  Miss  Julia  H. 

Young,  Mrs.  B.  L. 
Young,  Miss  Emily  W. 
Young,  Miss  Elizabetli 


Mrs.  David  Xevins  Mrs.  L.  X.  Kettle  Mrs.  R.  A.  Lawrenc( 

Mr-.  Ambrose  Dawes  .Mrs.  B.  T.  Morrison 


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